Posts Tagged ‘Bride of Christ’


Mat 9:17 Nor do people pour new wine into old wineskins. If they do, the skins burst, the wine runs out, and the skins are ruined. Rather, people pour new wine into fresh skins, and both are saved.”

The signs are clear to the truth that we are in the these days now and we can see where the Lord has started the process of pouring out His wine into new wine skins, for many over the past 50 years have mis-handled His wine, they have diluted it with the things of this world. Yet we do serve a God of Mercy, who will look upon once again with favor those whom turn, repent and ask for His forgiveness:

Remember how far you have fallen. Return to me and change the way you think and act, and do what you did at first. I will come to you and take your lamp stand from its place if you don’t change.(Rev 2:5)

We must understand that God the Father wants us to change, He in His Mercy has dealt with the western church as a father deals with an infant, after all we are but a few hundred years old. But we are now in the era that we should have matured into sons & daughters of righteousness rather than un -matured squabbling babies.

There are many “churches” which had the revelation of this truth, of how far the main stream has walked away for the Pure Gospel, to one that is diluted with the philosophies of men and is in actuality not the Gospel at all. I say that because much of the “church” has gotten to where they have the desire and ability to make the people worship them, like the sons of Eli, they have lead the Bride from the heart of the Father, to become addicted to the emotional services, to become addicted to the “ministry” of the House rather than to the place of complete surrender to the King, Jesus Christ. With a luring of hype and emotionalism they have betrayed the very One whom they are supposed to be serving.

We see that it was with regret that those, who once saw this truth and having broken away from the traditions of religion haven’t not completely washed off the religious traditions after a period of time they merely become a smaller model of the larger harlots.

The Bride of Christ must come forth and shed herself of the ways of the world, remove the garments of bondage. To those who do the Lord has promised many rewards for being the victorious Bride:

“Let the person who has ears listen to what the Spirit says to the churches. I will give the privilege of eating from the tree of life, which stands in the paradise of God, to everyone who wins the victory.(Rev 2:7)

Let the person who has ears listen to what the Spirit says to the churches. Everyone who wins the victory will never be hurt by the second death. (Rev 2:11)

Let the person who has ears listen to what the Spirit says to the churches. I will give some of the hidden manna to everyone who wins the victory. I will also give each person a white stone with a new name written on it, a name that is known only to the person who receives it. (Rev 2:17)

A word of caution to those who have received the revelation of who the Bride is, to come out and walk in holiness, shedding the ways of the old wine skin, not to look back and conform to that which the Lord has called you from. We must take a stand of no compromise, holding onto the glorious truth, being a broken vessel like that of the alabaster box, for you are precious, purchased with a great price, you must remain pure, unadulterated. (Matt 26:7)

We must be a people who stand in the gap for those trapped in the old, we have been giving the keys to freedom and walking in the position of true sons & daughters of the Most High, to be the lamp stands of His glory and be the very torches of holiness that light up the entrance into His Kingdom.

For the desire of the Father is that non should perish rather that all are saved.

Torches that have been dipped in the oils of His holiness, rapped in His righteousness and lite by the fires of His love and compassion for His church which John saw inn His eyes (Rev 1:14).

The radical disciples desire only to see the will of the Father done – their lives have been placed upon the Alter – the old wine skin has been removed and once removed the New Wine skin is being filled.

Are you radical enough today that there is no dilution in the wine that the Father is pouring out – have you forsaken the Old and with hungry hearts have fallen face first on the alter crying out to the Father, as did Isaiah, use me!

Friends we are in radical times and it will take radical individuals who count not their own lives even unto death that the lost and dying should see the glory of the Father!

Are you a radical?

If you are, then you shall produce radical fruit – larger because it is receiving from the True true!

(Re-posted in modified form via Russ G Welch Facebook originally posted 04-27-10)


Doctrines developed in the past apostate church age offered little or no hope for man or the world in this present life. The essence of these doctrines is that the world and its systems are hopelessly tainted with sin and, subsequently, evil. They, therefore, are fit only to be destroyed and replaced by a newly created planet. In this view there is no hope for the present world to be cleansed and restored. The only hope for the planet is total destruction by the judgmental fire of God melting and dissolving the very elements of the planet.

Some fruits from the essence of these teachings are:

1. A release of man’s responsibility to preserve and care for the natural systems of the planet. There is little or no incentive for man to cooperate with natural laws of God’s order. Short range, more immediately profitable actions are often chosen over those that align with God’s natural order, which are designed for the continued existence of the planet’s systems. The underlying rationale seems to be, “Why be concerned since it is all going to burn and be destroyed anyway, and probably soon”?

2. A lack of appreciation for the wonderful creation of the beautiful, life- supporting planet. The glorious essence of God can be seen in the beauty of His creation. The intense blue of mountain lakes reflect more than the breathtaking awesomeness of the magnificent mountain scenes. It also reflects something about our loving, great God. The unfathomable complexity of the chemical, physical, biological, zoological, meteorological, ecological, and other systems of the planet all speak of our God, who created them. They are all designed to intricately work together to support continuing life on the planet, and the continued life of the planet itself.

3. A lack of respect for life on earth and man’s awesome and exciting potential with God. Man is the only part of God’s creation designed to intimately relate to God, to actually experience knowing Him. Man is designed to rule and reign with Him now in this present age. A lack of appreciation for God’s natural creation leads to a lack of respect for the life of man himself. Man is linked to and a part of the world’s systems.

Do these fruits seem to line up with the words of Jesus and the nature of God? Jesus came that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly. It is God’s nature to give life, to heal, and to deliver. Someone else desires to destroy. The thief does not come except to steal, and to kill, and to destroy (John 10:10). It is not God’s plan or desire to destroy the earth, but rather to purify it. Jesus often spoke of the wicked being removed and the righteous shining forth on earth (Matt. 13:24-30, 37-43).

The scripture also speaks clearly of God destroying those who destroy the earth.
Rev. 11:18b: And that You should reward Your servants the prophets and the saints, And those who fear Your name, small and great, And should destroy those who destroy the earth.

Since the essence of the teachings that the earth is bad and fit only to be despised and destroyed does not appear to line up with the words of Jesus and the nature of God, we need to reexamine the scriptures that seem to affirm these teachings.

Does God love the world’s systems or despise them? Are we to love the world or to despise it? Certainly, we know God loves man. However, God does not love man’s sin and evil nature. God loves the world, but does not love the evil in the world implanted by the devil. In our considerations, we must make a distinction in our consideration between the created planet and the two systems that seek to rule life on the planet.

One ruling system is the evil order of the enemy and the other ruling system is the order of God from heaven. Both of these systems are referred to as the “kosmos” in the Greek New Testament text.

One of the most well known scripture verses is John 3:16, which many Christians have taught to their small children. Many correctly use this verse to instill in children that God loves them so much that Jesus came to save them and everyone who will believe. We may read the verse, “For God so loved the world”, but think in our minds,

“For God so loved me or mankind”. Granted, the individual and mankind are the focus of what is being spoken of here, but more than mankind is being referred to as the world.

The word translated “world” here is the Greek word “kosmos,” which is generally interpreted as “world order”. Strong’s Concordance Greek Dictionary defines the word as orderly arrangement, and by implication, the world and its inhabitants.
[ “G2889. kosmos, kos’-mos; prob. from the base of G2865; orderly arrangement, i.e. decoration; by impl. the world (in a wide or narrow sense, includ. its inhabitants, lit. or fig. [mor.]):–adorning, world.” The root or base is: G2865. komizo, kom-id’-zo; from a prim. komeo (to tend, i.e. take care of); prop. to provide for, i.e. (by impl.) to carry off (as if from harm; gen. obtain):–bring, receive.]

Jesus came to save more than mankind; He came to save the world. God desires to redeem all the “kosmos,” all the adorning and decorative systems. Since God has given mankind authority and responsibility to have dominion on earth, man must first be redeemed and brought into order with God and His ways for the world to be saved or restored.

God chose to limit himself by ruling through man on earth and has never rescinded that position. Man has the free will to make decisions regarding the order of rule in the world. Therefore, God had to become a man to save the world. God became a man in Jesus Christ. His original created order is for man to have dominion in the world (Gen. 1:26-28).

The man Jesus, seated at the right hand of the Father in heaven, now rules in the world as he lives within believers on the earth by the Holy Spirit. As human beings receive Christ Jesus into their lives by the Holy Spirit and yield control of their lives to the Spirit of Christ within, the will of God is done from heaven on earth through man.

The kingdom of God from heaven rules in the world and the ways of God redeem and restore the kosmos.

The key to the redemption of the world is the salvation of man. Therefore, man’s redemption is the world’s only hope.

In every instance, the word translated world in John 3:16-17, is kosmos.
John 3:16-17: “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.

In these verses God speaks of man being saved in relation to the world being saved.

There is no distinction made between mankind and the rest of the world as the object of God’s saving love. The priority in these verses is that the kosmos be saved.
Mankind is a major part of the kosmos and is God’s caretaker for the planet. Even the root of the word kosmos, (komizo and komeo) means to tend or take care of, to provide for and keep from harm. Man is to carry out the order of God’s design on the earth. The kingdom of God, the will of God, is to come forth through redeemed man–more specifically by Christ Jesus within man.

Two Worlds On Planet Earth
Obviously, God loves the world (the world He created and its systems of life). Yet, other scriptures make it clear that we are not to love the world (evil world order) or the things of the world (evil works in the world).

In scripture, there is one planet but two worlds spoken of. First, there is the world system that God created and loves and that we are to love as well. Second there is the evil fallen world system that was released by Adam and that we are told not to love. These two world systems are kingdoms–the kingdom of light and the kingdom of darkness. The kingdom of darkness is evil but offers attractive enticements that appeal to the lust of the flesh and seek to lure people under its influence and entrapment.

We are not to love this evil world system or the things it offers. Neither of these world systems is the physical planet but spirit-led systems working to guide and empower humans beings that have dominion on the planet. Human beings have the authority to decide which system is released into the world. Neither system will have dominion in the world without the will of mankind releasing it.

In every instance the word translated world in 1 John 2:15-17, is also kosmos.
1 John 2:15-17: Do not love the world or the things in the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world; the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life; is not of the Father but is of the world.

And the world is passing away, and the lust of it; but he who does the will of God abides forever.

Man is not being instructed not to have loving concern for the world, but is being told to not have the love of (from) the evil world system. The world has its own kind of selfish, lustful, greedy affection–the desires of the flesh. We are not to have that love of the world. We are not to lust after the things of the world. However, we are to be filled with the love of God for the world and desire its redemption.

The love of God satisfies.
The love of (from) God is a fully satisfying inner abundance. Individuals filled with the love from God feel no anxiety or frustrating need for anything else. Nothing further is required for their spirit and soul to be at perfect peace. From this inner abundance flows a great desire and potential to love the kosmos (the world and its inhabitants).

This leads to serving mankind and the world around us by seeking to make things better for everyone, which brings the peaceful, prosperous, order of God to the kosmos. Love from God is a giving kind of love.

The love of (from) the world is not really love at all, but lust for the kosmos. It is seeking to fill an inner need that exists because the love of (from) God is not filling the individual. In reality the world’s kind of love (lust) is not love at all. It stems from the lack of the presence of God’s love within. The inner need created by unlove leads to the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life. The inner need becomes like a great vacuum trying to fill the void with the kosmos (the world and the things in it, including people). The kosmos is consumed, used, and destroyed as the inner need drives the individual to get more, have more, be more, and experience more. The love of (from) the world is a taking kind of unlove.

The love of God is in Christ Jesus. The potential for the very love of God in your life and mine is in Jesus. If the Spirit of Christ rules our hearts, the love of God is manifest in our lives.

John 17:26: And I have declared to them Your name, and will declare it, that the love with which You loved Me may be in them, and I in them.

Christ in man is the practical method by which love from God fills one’s life until no room exists for the love (lust) from the world system for the things in the world.

There is a vast difference between having loving concern for the kosmos (as God also does) and seeking to possess or consume the kosmos from our lust of the flesh, lust of the eyes, and pride of this life. The Spirit of Christ Jesus living and ruling within by the Holy Spirit guides and empowers individuals to walk in freedom from the lust of the flesh and to be filled with the love of (from) God. All people that do not have the love of God abiding within them by the Spirit will have lust for the things of the world. It is not possible for one in whom Christ Jesus does not dwell to be filled with the love of God and to be free of the love of (from) the world.

Gal 5:16-17: I say then: Walk in the Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh. For the flesh lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh; and these are contrary to one another, so that you do not do the things that you wish.

Many Christians may need to rethink their worldview.
A belief that God does not love the kosmos may have led us to devalue much of what God loves, and sent His Son to save. Man is inseparably a part of the kosmos. To harm or destroy the world is to harm one’s self. To bless and redeem the world is to bless one’s self. As man takes care of the world, the world takes care of man. I’m reminded of an old saying that farmers once used, If you will take care of the land, the land will take care of you. This same wisdom applies to all of the kosmos.

The world is not inherently evil. It is a marvelous and wonderful creation of God. The systems and order of the world are awesomely grand beyond all we can think. The complex intricacy of biological systems, ecological systems, and the physical make up of all things is more than all the minds of man together could ever understand. Yet, it all fits and works together to perpetually sustain life. The beauty of the colors, shapes, and patterns of the mountains, lakes, forests, plains, and mighty oceans are marvelous beyond compare. The delicate, delightful fragrances of the rose, the flowers of the field, the spruce or fir tree, or the pine tree on a still spring evening, all speak of God’s love and provision for the world.

It is humbling to realize that God has put man in charge of caring for His marvelous creation. To not be concerned about caring for the people, animals, and the ecology of the world is to be apart from the plan of God. As man, by the power of the indwelling Christ, walks in accordance with God’s ways, the kosmos is healed. Mankind, seeking the kingdom of God and His righteous ways of being and doing, moves man and the world systems toward healing and restoration (Matt. 6:33) (Rom 8:19-22).

Mankind, seeking his own way apart from God, moves man and the world systems toward disorder and destruction. God has not planned the destruction of His creation. The power of Christ in man is sufficient to heal and restore the kosmos.

John 3:16a, 17b: For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that the world through him might be saved.

John 1:29b: Behold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!

Keep on Pursuing Love
It Will Never Fail,
Ron McGatlin
http://www.openheaven.com
basileia@earthlink.net


I believe that if we are to truly lead people to Christ and then disciple into maturity, we need to be more Christ-like in our leadership style. In order for this to happen we need to have a radical transformation in the manner for which we disciple new believers in our day!

Too often I find leaders getting depressed when other are not at their same maturity and the depression opens the door to bitterness and the door of bitterness open yet into another room of those classified as cold hearted burnouts. They may still confess that they love the Lord, yet the most important Spiritual fruit in ones life which testifies to having Christ in our hearts is vacant in their lives – the fruit of Love!

I have been in “church” for 30 plus years and involved in ministry for a little over ten years, six of which has been in nursing homes. At first I felt as though everyone should be involved in the nursing home ministry, if you were not you lacked compassion.

It didn’t take long for Holy Ghost to kick that horse of pride out from underneath me. It had gotten to the point where I had even made a comfortable spiritual saddle lined with scriptures to back up my point.

None of which offered much comfort when I fell on my spiritual backside – that fall was just hard enough to jar loose all the religious garbage that I had been feeding myself on.

Holy Ghost then took me on a journey thru the scriptures and pointed out how everyone is not (thankfully) called to the same task. We are each designed in the image of God, yes, and we should all strive to have the character of God within our make up, yes. But there is no way one individual can be like God, yet when we see the Body as a whole, operating in each called gift, we get a glimpse of the very nature of God.

As leaders we can not allow the thought that “everyone needs to be like me and walk in the same calling that I have or else they simply are not a good Christian” take root in our hearts. In fact I know some brothers and sisters who try so hard to walk in the calling of the leaders around them they are actually living in rebellion because they are not walking in the calling of the Father on their lives. I don’t know about anyone else but as for myself I never want to be in a position where I cause another believer to rebel against the Fathers call on their lives.

It is so easy to get caught up in the false religious leadership functioning style that is out there today – which is why we need to stay in the Word and most definitely stay in communion with the Father. Our prayer life should consume the majority of our time. When we are so saturated in the presence of the Father, that His glory is so strong we need not speak but a few words, for just the shadow of His presence on our lives heals the sick, set’s the captives free and raises the dead – then we will know we’ve indeed been in the presence of the Father in quality time, even as was the life of Christ pour Lord!

We need more men and women in leadership today who are motivated by the unction of Holy Ghost and not being stirred by the emotions of their hearts, motivated by the very situations and conditions around them.

We need more preachers in the pulpit who know the Word so intimately that they can teach it to those whom the Lord puts before them not only thru spoken words but thru their life actions being lived out before the people – then we will see the opening of spiritual prison doors and the captives coming out in true freedom!

We need to put an end to cookie cutter ministries who seek to turn out perfect little Christians molded in the image of the doctrinal understanding we have and instead allow Holy Ghost to be able to impart the very gifts and calling of God according to that which the Father desires for each individual.

We need to go back to the basics of true discipleship according to the teachings of Christ that we will see the Johns and Peters, the Nathanael’s and James’s. the Matthew’s and Bartholomew’s. the Thomas’s and Andrew’s and the Simon’s and Philip’s rising up (Not only men but women as well). Each one was called of God, yet each one had a ministry gift that they operated in which was singularly different, yet when brought together made up the whole group’s character.

God’s ultimate goal for each individual’s life on earth is not comfort, but character development. He wants each of us to grow up spiritually. Becoming like Christ does not mean losing ones personality or becoming a mindless clone. God created each of us with an individual uniqueness, so he certainly doesn’t want to destroy it. Christ-likeness is all about transforming our character, not our personality.

We need to stop judging people as to whether they hold up to our calling and instead help them get positioned to where they are exhibiting the fruit of their individual calling. We are called to be Christ like, we were never called to look like and act like one another – other than the true unified display of our love for one another.

If we are to be true leaders in regard to maturing the babes in Christ we need to take a step back from the prideful reflection of ourselves, stepping into the very potion of where we can see with spiritual eyes open, the prophetic reflection of Christ in others lives – not who they are right now in the natural, rather who they are in Christ according to the Father’s calling on their lives.

Until we model the discipleship style that Jesus laid out for us, we will never see those before us maturing into true disciples of Jesus Christ.

If we desire to see radical disciples of Christ sold out radically to live as He has called us to live, then we must radically change the way we do church and the way we disciple, returning back to the style we find rooted in the gospels and the book of Acts.

I will end this with the writing’s of the Apostle Paul:

And he gave some apostles, some prophets, others evangelists, others shepherds and teachers, to the full ending of saints, into the work of ministry, into [the] edification of Christ’s body, till we run all, into unity of faith and of knowing of God’s Son, into a perfect man, after the measure of the age of the plenty of Christ; [till we run all, in unity of faith and of knowing of God’s Son, into a perfect man, into the measure of age of the plenty of Christ;] that we be not now little children, moving as waves, and be not borne about with each wind of teaching [and be borne about with all wind of teaching], in the waywardness of men, in subtle wit, to the deceiving of error.

But do we truth in charity, and wax in him by all things, that is Christ our head; [Forsooth we doing truth in charity, wax in him by all things, that is Christ the head;] of whom all the body set together, and bound together by each jointure of under-serving, by working into the measure of each member [after working into the measure of each member], maketh increasing of the body, into [the] edification of itself in charity.

Therefore I say and witness this thing in the Lord [Therefore this thing I say, and witness in the Lord], that ye walk not now, as heathen men walk, in the vanity of their wit; that have understanding darkened with darknesses [having their understanding darkened], and be aliened from the life of God, by ignorance that is in them, for the blindness of their heart.

Which despairing betook themselves to unchastity, into the working of all uncleanness in covetousness.

But ye have not so learned Christ, if nevertheless ye heard him, and be taught in him, as is truth in Jesus.

Do ye away by the old living the old man, that is corrupt by the desires of error; [Do ye away after the first living the old man, that is corrupt after the desires of error;] and be ye renewed in the spirit of your soul; and clothe ye the new man, which is made after God in rightwiseness and holiness of truth. [and clothe ye the new man, which after God is made of nought in rightwiseness and holiness of truth.] (Eph 4:11-24 Wycliff New Testament)

The highest calling is that of servant-hood,

Russ Welch


Don’t say anything that would hurt [another person]. Instead, speak only what is good so that you can give help wherever it is needed. That way, what you say will help those who hear you. (Eph 4:29)

When we accepted Christ as our Lord, did we not surrender our right in regard to how we speak to others. Especially when we desire our “right” to voice our opinion when it is nothing more than tearing down another?

I have often heard others make the statement and even had Holy Ghost convict me of such behavior that we have the right to voice our opinion at the cost of hurting another, after all it is our right!

This is so far from the Kingdom culture that we must submit this to the power of the cross to broken off from our lives. If we have been wronged by another we are to forgive them even as Jesus taught us rather than letting our carnal mind be expressed when it is in the state of fleshly thinking.

The opening scripture defines how we should respond even when others may be rubbing us the wrong way. There are several scriptures which reference this and we must put them into our hearts, allowing Holy Ghost to write them there as a weight against the way in which we deal with others. Scriptures such as Eph 4:29 mentioned above as well as Col 4:6 should be our compass when we are faced with a situation that we need to respond.

Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone. (Col 4:6)

For we can have a powerful testimony of God’s grace in our lives be torn apart in moment just because we believe we have a right to respond harshly in the face of being wronged.

I’m not sure about you but I often find myself saying the wrong thing. I’m often much more comfortable expressing myself through the written word so that I have an opportunity to take some time and be thoughtful concerning the points I would like to make. Unfortunately, we don’t always have that luxury in real-time conversation, and our emotions often take over.

James 3:3 states Now when we put bits into the mouths of horses to make them obey us, we also guide the whole animal. When I was growing up I worked at a horse stable for a summer and I would watch as the trainer would place the bridle over his trail horse and then insert the bit into the animal’s mouth. I thought it was cruel, but in the end I saw how the bit could turn the horse on a dime. Just as we place a bit in the mouth of a horse to control it we should have a bit….of sorts…..to control our tongue so that when we are engaged in conversation we say the right things.

The tongue is a mighty weapon. We often use it to destroy someone else on purpose or unintentionally. What we think of as small little comment can actually wreak a bit of havoc with someone else……So too, though the tongue is a small part [of the body], it boasts great things. Consider how large a forest a small fire ignites (James 3:5).

James 3:6-7 continues the thought….And the tongue is a fire. The tongue, a world of unrighteousness, is placed among the parts of our [bodies]; it pollutes the whole body, sets the course of life on fire, and is set on fire by hell. For every creature—animal or bird, reptile or fish—is tamed and has been tamed by man. Our tongue can destroy what we love. Our tongue can get us into mischief. Our tongue can embarrass us greatly. Our tongue shapes our character and provides a method for others to view us. Unfortunately very few men learn to control their tongues even though we have learned to control many things of this world including various animals.

Many people live their lives by excelling as verbal arsonists setting fires everywhere they go. They berate their kids, their spouse, and their friends. They intimidate others with their arrogance and some even turn folks off by their constant comments of doom and gloom.

We must remember our tongues display who we are…..the true us….not that fake one we put on for company. Our words shape who we are.

The tongue is inconsistent……The words we utter often don’t make sense. James 3: 9 explains…With it we bless our Lord and Father, and with it we curse men who are made in God’s likeness. How can this be?

How many people did you judge today? Curse today? Belittle today? Perhaps you are like me and you have explained your actions away because you didn’t speak your words….you just thought them. Perhaps you voiced your opinion to someone else and not to the person your words could destroy.

It doesn’t matter. Your words….spoken or unspoken…..delivered to the person they are about or to someone else are YOUR words from YOUR tongue. By allowing your tongue to flap in that manner you are belittling something…cursing something made in God’s image.

The true condition of your heart comes out through your tongue. Many, many years prior to Freud explaining why we have so many hang-ups Jesus had the answer as He said, “For out of the overflow of the heart the mouth speaks” (Matthew 12:34).

It would seem then that the solution to control the tongue is not a bridle and bit…..not a rudder….., but a new heart. Rid yourself of all the offenses you have committed and get a new heart and a new spirit (Ezekiel 18:31), and we need to continually ask God for help everyday…..Set a guard over my mouth, O Lord, keep watch over the door of my lips (Psalm 141:3).

I know in my own life, Holy Ghost has been teaching me to respond with the same Grace, Mercy and Love that the Father has used in my life. Above all things we must act in Love – for we can operate in many of the gifts of the Spirit, preach or sing before huge crowds, win hundreds of soul’s to the Kingdom, yet in our personal dealing’s with others if we allow what we consider to be our “right” to respond anyway we please and do not respond I n Love all the other thing matter not.

I’ll be asking Holy Ghost for His help everyday in my own walk…..will you?

HIS,
Russ Welch


ROMANS CHAPTER EIGHT:

MANUMISSION
by George E. (Jed) Smock

The man whose eyes dim with age may not realize his gradual loss of sight. Then one day he buys glasses. Suddenly he can see again! Everything is clearer and brighter. He can focus on reality. His life has changed! Dear reader, put on your spiritual glasses as we enter into chapter 8.

Chapter 7 is filled with condemnation and despair, but chapter 8 opens with a clear and cheerful transition from sin and death to righteousness and life. Paul had spoken of what it was like when one serves in the oldness of the letter; but now, he describes the way things are in the life of the regenerate in the life of one who is born again, who serves in the newness of the Spirit. The slave of sin has become the servant of his Redeemer.

In chapter 7, the indwelling Christ and Holy Spirit are not mentioned; but now the Thou shalt not of the law gives place to the abiding of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit. Here we are going to encounter the normal Christian life under the influence of the grace of God. Here we find man restored to the image of God, triumphant over sin and fully equipped to take dominion and run the race that is set before him. We find man empowered to live in a loving relationship with God and his neighbor.

Conditional Redemption

1 There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. Condemnation is the opposite of justification. Justification is God’s act of grace in pardoning the sinner from all past guilt and the setting aside of the penalty of violated law. Condemnation is a pronouncement against the lawless by the Judge of all the earth. It brings assurance that the penalty of sin will be enforced.

Walking after the Spirit is the evidence that one is in union with Christ Jesus. The proof that we are walking after the Spirit is the fruit of the Spirit. The law has no claim against those producing the fruit of the Spirit. But those producing the works of the flesh (sin) are condemned to the uttermost by the law (Galatians 5:17-23).

It should be noted that the qualifying clause, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit, is left out of most modern translations because it is not in what certain scholars consider the best manuscripts. Whether it should or should not be here, I could not say. But the stipulation is definitely in verse 4; so it is a moot question.

There are dreamers who teach that by one act of faith a man is saved eternally, regardless of his following actions. They are presumptuous enough even to appeal to Paul’s conclusion in Romans 8 to justify their nefarious doctrine: Who shall lay any thing to the charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth. Who is he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea rather, that is risen again, who is even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us. Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is written, For thy sake we are killed all the day long; we are accounted as sheep for the slaughter. Nay, in all these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us. For I am persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, Nor height, nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

This passage represents the Christian going through great persecutions, even facing death for the gospel’s sake. Through it all he stands steadfast in the faith. To apply these verses to someone who once genuinely acted in faith, but has since become luke warm and self-indulgent, is outrageous and disrespectful to the martyrs of our faith. There is nothing that can separate us from the blessings of a loving relationship with God, but sin. But the Christian more than conquers sin. Those who walk in the Spirit separate themselves from sin because the commission of sin is inconsistent with the supreme love to God which the law and the Spirit require.

Free to Obey

2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death.

Paul says he has been made free from the law of sin and death. Now he is bound to the law of holiness and life. Notice that in chapter 7, verse 23, he says he is in captivity to the law of sin. But now he is free; he is under the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus. So one is either under the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus, or under the law of sin and death — one cannot be under both laws at the same time. One is either walking after the Spirit, or one is walking after the flesh; one cannot walk after the Spirit and after the flesh at the same time. Again, this is the simple, logical conclusion drawn from these Scriptures.

3 For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh,

In the previous chapter Paul had exalted the law as holy, just, spiritual and good, but here he says that the law is weak. Now in what sense is the law weak? The law is weak in what it could accomplish. The law was given to show us our responsibility to our Maker and our duty toward our fellows. Had men obeyed the law’s dictates, it would have blessed and rewarded, instead of judging and inflicting penalty. But when transgression entered and the flesh prevailed, the law was rendered weak and ineffective, in that it never had the capacity to break the power of sin and clear the conscience. The law, when transgressed, cried from Sinai, “Guilty and condemned! Guilty and condemned!” But the gospel proclaims from Calvary, “Forgiven and redeemed! Pardoned and set free!” The power is in the grace of God to forgive — not in the law. Nor was there any power in the law to change or perfect a man. For the law made nothing perfect, but the bringing in of a better hope did; by the which we draw nigh unto God (Hebrews 7:19). So the law was weak, or limited, in what it could achieve. But the better hope, the covenant of grace, the offering of Jesus’ blood hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified (Hebrews 10:14) by purging our consciences from dead works to serve the living God (Hebrews 9:14).

3b God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh.

What the law could not achieve, Christ has accomplished through His Incarnation. The Word became flesh! “The likeness of sinful flesh” implies the real humanity of Jesus, in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin (Hebrews 4:15). His perfect and victorious life condemns sin in the flesh. He reproduced the law in a higher manner. What the law spoke in words, He fulfilled in the loveliness of perfect deeds. His example and active goodness inspire reverence and rouse men to imitation. His life reveals that God’s law is indeed holy, just, good, spiritual, and livable in human nature quickened by the Divine. His life in human flesh provides a new hope for human nature. What the man Christ Jesus was, we may become. In the same flesh in which the tyrant sin had ruled, Christ now rules. Therefore, we are to be like Him in character.

But His holy life was not enough. It should have been, but it was not. Christ’s blameless character perfectly revealing the law should have broken man’s rebellion. But sin had taken a terrible toll; it had utterly ruined and enslaved man to do its bidding. Sin had thoroughly perverted man’s relationship with God and his fellow man. Sin, by abusing the law, corrupted his nature by leaving him with a sense of guilt. Alienation and guilt not only lead to misery, but actually strengthen the power of sin. Guilt repressed, leads to a hardening of the heart — to hate, where there should be love; depression, where there should be joy; doubt, where there should be faith; pride, where there should be humility; and indulgence, where there should be temperance. Sin so blinded man to the truth of God’s law, that even Jesus’ perfect life failed to open man’s eyes, but in fact, drove man deeper and deeper into rebellion. Sin threw all its force against the most loving being that ever walked the earth. Such is the power of sin.

Ultimately, Christ’s example without His atonement, like the law, proved to be weak, in that it, also, could not break the power of sin. But man’s rejection of his Messiah gave God the opportunity to demonstrate His love in the most profound manner possible, For when we were yet without strength [powerless to help ourselves], in due time Christ died for the ungodly. For scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die. But God commendeth His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:6-8). So the plan of the ages was put into effect. Jesus came “for sin.” His incarnation and death had a definite purpose — to abolish sin. His sacrificial death cancels the power of sin in the past; it removes the sense of guilt, and the iron curtain between man and God is broken down.

In Romans 7, we discover how the law reached Paul’s conscience and reason by its plain declaration of right and wrong. Its spiritual nature appealed to his mind, but the law did not positively change his heart. What the physical heart is to the body, the spiritual heart is to the soul. The heart is the seat of the affections. It is the control center of one’s life. The heart represents the motivating purpose of our life. It is the inner state which influences the will in making choices between right and wrong. The law could not break man’s hard heart.

But Christ’s coming “for sin, ” through the agony of His atoning death, finally succeeds where the law, and even His sinless life, did not. His sacrifice provides the efficacious influence (love) to transform the human heart, by convincing it to turn from a life committed to self, to a life committed to love for God and neighbor. Faith beholds the Cross which furnishes the loving motive to move man’s will to fulfil God’s benevolent will. His love, as manifested on Mt. Calvary, kindled our love and recast the outward law into an inward Spirit of life in Christ Jesus.

Jesus Christ has reconciled you unto Himself, In the body of His flesh through death, to present you holy and unblameable and unreproveable in His sight. If ye continue in the faith… (Colossians 1:22-23).

Either the sin that dwelleth in men must be condemned, or we must be condemned. Sin must be destroyed, or it will destroy us. We must be totally separated from sin, or it will separate us eternally from God.

In Romans 8:4, we discover that Christ dethroned and sentenced to death sin in the flesh, That the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. How is the righteousness of the law fulfilled in us? Whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witness to us: for after that He had said before, This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, saith the Lord, I will put My laws into their hearts, and in their minds will I write them (Hebrews 10:15-16). Under the new covenant, the law is no longer something merely written on stone or with pen and ink; it is written on the hearts and minds of all who believe. It is not a dead letter, but a spiritual one; not something outward, but inward. It is the royal law, the law of love for God and man. Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the law (Romans 3:31). By grace through faith we are enabled to entirely obey God. Our Lord has condemned sin in the flesh; now we naturally do what is right, because we love righteousness and hate iniquity.

Many hold to the opinion that righteousness is something merely imputed unto those who believe in Christ. They teach that Jesus obeyed the law for us, and His righteousness is accounted unto us. Therefore, we are under no obligation to obey. Indeed, according to them it is not possible for us to obey. They are fond of applying Romans 3:10 to the Christian: There is none righteous, no, not one.

But Paul was not applying this verse to those who had been justified by faith, but to those who were not so much as seeking after God, and who were out of the way (Romans 3:11-12). In Romans 10:10 Paul declares, with the heart man believeth unto righteousness.

Saint John utterly destroys this nonsense that God considers us righteous while we continue to sin. John writes, If ye know that He is righteous, ye know that every one that doeth righteousness is born of Him (I John 2:29). Little children — let no man deceive you: he that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as He is righteous (1 John 3:7).

There are numerous examples in which the Bible speaks of believers being righteous or practicing righteousness: Matthew 10:41; 23:35; 25:37; Luke 1:6; John 5:29; Acts 11:24; 2 Corinthians 6:14; 1 Peter 4:18; 3 John 11; Revelation 22:11 and others.

Christ’s righteousness is neither imputed (accounted), or imparted, unto the believer. Paul says in Romans 4 that Abraham’s faith (his faith, not Christ’s) was counted unto him for righteousness (Romans 4:3-5), because faith always embraces righteousness. If it does not, it is not justifying faith. Neither is Christ’s righteousness imparted, because righteousness is, and must be, a voluntary state of being. Righteousness is subjective. It has no existence independent of moral agents. It is not an object that God infuses into the believer.

What then is this doctrine of Paul’s concerning imputed righteousness? Paul quoted the Psalmist, Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputeth righteousness without works (Romans 4:6). Paul taught that righteousness will be imputed to us as it was to Abraham, If we believe on Him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead (Romans 3:24). Paul instructed that our faith is a necessary condition for God to account us as righteous. We can be thankful that works on our part are not a condition for God to declare us justified. If so, our situation would have been hopeless. Indeed, when we first believed, we had no good works to offer Him. All of our actions were corrupted by our selfishness. So God considered us to be righteous before we had any good works to offer on the condition of our faith in God’s love to us, by giving His Son as an atonement for our sins. However, to remain justified, we must keep the faith that produces works. Those who have saving faith have the faith which works by love (Galatians 5:6, NIV).

This fictitious notion that Christ’s righteousness is imputed to the believer is impossible, because character is personal and not transferable. Not only that, but Christ Himself was obligated to obey the law. Had He failed, He would not have been able to make an acceptable atonement.

No Carnal Christians

5 For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the flesh; but they that are after the Spirit the things of the Spirit. One is either minding (obeying) the flesh, or minding (obeying) the Spirit. We cannot do both simultaneously. Those who consider Paul’s experience in Romans 7 Christian, and who believe that a Christian has a dual nature, have made a very nice arrangement for the flesh not only to survive, but to flourish. Paul emphasizes we are to give no place to the flesh whatsoever: Put ye on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfil the lusts thereof (Romans 13:14).

In our life before Christ we all minded the flesh by indulging in unlawful desires: Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature [as a result of our wrong choice to live selfishly] the children of wrath, even as others (Ephesians 2:3).

Paul exhorts those at Ephesus who had professed Christ, but were deceived by false teachers: That ye put off concerning the former conversation [life] the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts; And be renewed in the spirit of your mind; And that ye put on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness (Ephesians 4:22 24). The sensible person always takes off the old and filthy garments before putting on the new. The senseless are content to wear the new over the old and dirty, or gradually to put on the new and take off the old.

6 For to be carnally minded is death; but to be spiritually minded is life and peace.

To be carnally minded is death. Now in Romans 7:14, remember Paul says, I am carnal, sold under sin — further proof that Paul, in chapter 7, is reflecting on his experience prior to conversion, dead in his trespasses and sins. Anyone carnally minded is spiritually dead. This idea of a carnal Christian is a contradiction in terms.

Mankind has three cardinal faculties: intelligence (a mind, with the ability to reason; his moral nature), sensibility (the ability to feel and experience; his emotional nature), and the will (his volition). Now the individual who is carnally minded has his will submitted to gratifying his sensibilities — he is governed by his emotions, passions and natural appetites. His abiding purpose in life is self-indulgence. The spiritually-minded man submits his will to his intelligence and the law of reason. And the law of reason is developed and applied by the Spirit of God. His mind, his intellect, is submitted to the Holy Spirit. The spiritual man minds the things of the Spirit. The settled preference in his life is the will of God.

Christians are often cautioned when seeking the will of God, “Don’t let your intellect get in the way ” This advice can be dangerous and is often disastrous, usually resulting in one’s emotions and selfish desires holding sway in one’s decisions. Our rational faculties separate us from the animal kingdom. We are capable of making moral decisions, while animals are merely creatures of instinct. Would God give us this wonderful faculty of the mind, of human intellect and reason, and then as Christians, not expect us to use it? Granted, the intellect of the unbeliever is often a hindrance to faith because he may be reasoning falsely For instance, the humanist reasons from the false premise that man is at the center of the universe. Although his reasoning might be consistent in the light of that presupposition, his wrong premise brings him to false conclusions. But the Christian reasons with the assumption that God is at the center of the universe, and that God is at the center of his life. Unfortunately, with many “Christians,” God is not at the center; and since self still reigns, their reasoning often does lead them to miss the will of God.

Faith and reason are to be friends, not enemies. Many today see a contradiction between faith and reason, but that is not true at all. As a matter of fact, true faith is rooted and grounded in evidence and reason. Yet many people today have faith confused with credulity — they will believe anything!

A student once asked me, “How do you take the leap of faith?

I answered, “Faith is not a leap, but a decision to submit the will to truth that has been perceived by the mind. God is not asking you to believe the unbelievable, but the believable. Your problem may be that you have not heard enough of the truth to believe. You need to make a serious study of the claims of, and evidence for, Christianity.”

7 Because the carnal mind is enmity against God: for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be.

The law of God is the law of love. Paul affirms that, since the carnal mind is the enemy of God, its hatred for God results in its disobeying the law. Malice and benevolence cannot exist in the mind of an individual at the same time. The carnal mind cannot be in submission as long as the enmity continues. Anyone who is an enemy of God certainly is not a Christian. Remember, Paul said he was carnal in Romans 7:14.

“If Paul is teaching the Romans that to be carnal is the same as being without Christ, why does he call the carnal Christians at Corinth his brethren?” And I, brethren, could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, even as unto babes in Christ. I have fed you with milk, and not with meat: for hitherto ye were not able to bear it, neither yet now are ye able. For ye are yet carnal: for whereas there is among you envying, and strife, and divisions, are ye not carnal, and walk as men? For while one saith, I am of Paul; and another, I am of Apollos; are ye not yet carnal (I Corinthians 3:1-4)? It is virtually universal in Christendom to refer to the visible and invisible church. The visible church includes all who name the name of Christ and have some affiliation with a group that claims to be Christian. The invisible church only embodies those who are actually born again and obeying God — the true Christians.

Any experienced minister addressing a sizable crowd is going to understand that not everyone present is even claiming to be a Christian, yet he would likely address the whole group as brethren or Christians, or even as Paul usually did in his letters, as saints.

Paul sent his epistles to the visible churches fully understanding they were a “mixed multitude” in every city. The invisible church at Corinth included what Paul termed “babes in Christ,” and the spiritual. Also, there were mixed among these Christians what Paul called “natural” or “carnal” men (not two separate categories). The natural or carnal men included those who envied and promoted division, and also those who idolized men and humanistic philosophy. Paul warns in Galatians 5:21 that people who commit these various works of the flesh shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Also among the real Christians at Corinth were fornicators, litigants, idolaters, adulterers, effeminates, sodomites, thieves, drunkards, revilers and extortioners, of which Paul warns that none shall inherit the kingdom of God (I Corinthians 6). Concerning this latter group, some had been in these conditions but had been washed,… sanctified,… and justified. Since he was not addressing individuals per se, but an assembly, Paul lumped all the babes, saints and sinners together under the term “brethren,” fully understanding that the natural, carnal sinners among them were, in fact, not saved.

This visible church concept explains why Paul, in virtually all of his letters, has to address the sin problem, while not assuming that the sinners among the churches were actually in communion with Christ.

Paul considered the Church at Galatia to be in a generally backslidden condition and feared for their salvation; but nevertheless, he still addressed them as brethren and even more intimately: My little children, of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in you…; for I stand in doubt of you….Christ is become of no effect unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace (Galatians 4:19, 20 and 5:4). The phrase “my little children” expresses the tender affection and yearning the Spirit of God has for those who have fallen back under the condemnation of the law. But this does not mean that a backslider is still in possession of eternal life, even though he might commonly still be called a brother, or Christian. Paul even referred to unbelieving Jews as his brethren (Romans 9).

8 So then they that are in the flesh cannot please God.

Now recollect when it says “in the flesh” in this context, it is not talking about skin, and bones and muscles — our physical bodies. To be in the flesh is to be living a life committed to self-indulgence, controlled by our emotions, passions and natural desires.

There is so much misunderstanding about being in the flesh. What is it to be in the flesh, or controlled by the flesh? One often hears the expression “in the Spirit” or “in the flesh” in circles where the gifts of the Spirit are being allegedly manifested with people wondering, “Was that person prophesying in the flesh or in the Spirit?”; or, “Was Sister Mary, when she got up and ran around the church, in the flesh or in the Spirit?” But these issues have no relevance in the context of Paul’s concerns in Romans 8.

The Foolish Galatians

To get clarification of what it means to be in the flesh or spirit, consider Galatians 5:16-25: This I say then, Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lust of the flesh. As long as we obey the Spirit of God and rely upon His power, we will not fulfill our natural appetites in any unlawful way. Remember, the flesh has a constitutional appetite for maximizing pleasure and minimizing pain. As long as we gratify our appetites for food, drink, sleep, success and physical intimacy, etc. in a proper manner we are not walking in the flesh. The flesh is not intrinsically evil. The term flesh is used in the sinful sense only when one is controlled by the flesh. The flesh must always be under the control of the mind, which is under the authority of the Spirit. Christ came to condemn sin in the flesh, but not the flesh itself.

17 For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other: so that ye cannot do the things that ye would.

The unlawful preferences of the flesh are against the will of the Spirit, and the Holy Spirit opposes the selfish desires of the flesh. They cannot co-exist in the same being. If one is walking in the Spirit, the Spirit will drive away the lusts of the flesh. If one is walking in the flesh, the flesh will grieve away the Holy Spirit. When the flesh has control (as among the Galatians, and also in the Romans 7 experience), you cannot do the good you desire. Or if one is not walking in the Spirit, he cannot do the good that he would.

The Galatians, having begun in the Spirit, were seeking to be made perfect through obedience to certain rites and rituals of the ceremonial law, such as circumcision of the flesh; but this was impossible. In seeking to be justified by the deeds of the law, they had fallen from grace, and Christ had become of no effect in their lives. They had ceased to understand that all the law is fulfilled in one word, even in this; Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself (Galatians 5:14). For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth any thing, nor uncircumcision; but faith which worketh by love (Galatians 5:6).

The Galatians were not the only church that had a strong element that was still looking to circumcision as the means to salvation. This attempt to put believers under the law through circumcision was a major problem that Paul had to address in several of the churches, including the Roman and Corinthian churches. It is difficult for the modern reader to appreciate what a fundamental issue this was in the early church because no one in the modern church is insisting on circumcision. However, the New Testament counterpart to circumcision is baptism. Many professing Christians are trusting in the rite of baptism for their salvation and making it a requirement for entrance into the Kingdom of God. Paul had to remind the Romans that the true circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit. He might say to the contemporary church that the true baptism “is that of the heart, in the spirit.” Paul told the church at Corinth that circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the commandments of God (I Corinthians 7:19). Today Paul would possibly say, “Immersion is nothing, sprinkling is nothing, but keeping the commandments of God is everything.”

But baptism is not the only contentious issue which is producing factions in our day. The church needs to be ever mindful not to major in subjects which become vain without first having the love of God. Church membership is nothing, a sinner’s prayer is nothing, partaking of the Lord’s Supper is nothing, speaking in tongues is nothing, fellowship is nothing and worship and praise are nothing, if we are not keeping the commandments of God. Divisive issues usually fade into the background when the church is constrained by the love of God, which produces obedience to His law. But, alas, to this generation, God’s law is nothing about which we need to be concerned.

But if ye be led of the Spirit, ye are not under the law (Galatians 5:18).

Contrapositive logic would conclude: If you are under the law, then you are not led of the Spirit. We learned from Romans 6:14, For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not under the law, but under grace. Again, contrapositive logic would infer, if sin does have dominion, you are not under grace, but under law. Clearly the man of the Romans 7 experience is not led of the Spirit, and sin definitely has dominion; so the logic is overwhelming: we must conclude that he is not under grace, but law, and therefore, not a Christian.

To be led of the Spirit is to walk in the law of love; then we are not under the yoke of the law. The moral law is no longer a burden, but a joy, to fulfill; and the ceremonial law is no longer applicable. The Holy Spirit will never lead us into sin; He has promised to deliver us from evil.

Having therefore these promises, dearly beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God (2 Corinthians 7:1). How do we cleanse and keep ourselves? By putting our faith in the promises of the Spirit and maintaining a holy dread of doing anything that would grieve the Spirit.

Now the works of the flesh are these: [these are some of the things that a carnally minded person might do] Adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness [These are all sexual sins. Notice, these are sins, works of the flesh — not demons of lust, but sins], Idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, Envyings, murders, drunkenness, revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before, as I have also told you in time past, that they which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God (Galatians 5:19-21). Are these not the very things the law of God forbade? In Galatians and Romans, Paul is in no sense abolishing moral law, but affirming law and the Christian’s moral obligation. This is a constant theme of Paul; he had likewise warned the church at Corinth: Do you not know that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Do not be deceived; neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor homosexuals, nor thieves, nor the covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers, shall inherit the kingdom God (I Corinthians 6:9, NAS). Anyone practicing any of these sinful acts is in the flesh — that is, walking after the flesh — and therefore, condemned, separated from God and headed for Hell. Yet so many are deceived today, thinking they can continue to sin and yet be a Christian, thinking they can persevere in sin and still have the gift of eternal life — they are deceived! But Paul says, “Be not deceived.”

It is a big mistake to assume works of the flesh are only noticeable by that which is base, gross and vile. Deeds of the flesh may be marked by that which is literate, cultured, genteel, tolerant, scholarly or even religious; but if the actions are rooted in selfishness, they are all dead works. And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing (I Corinthians 13:3). But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, Meekness, temperance: against such there is no law (Galatians 5:22 23).

There is no law or rule in the Bible that teaches that regenerated humanity cannot habitually manifest the fruit of the Spirit. There is no principle in our redeemed human nature that forces us to gratify the lusts of the flesh. There is no theological excuse to sin!

And they that are Christ’s have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts (Galatians 5:24). If you belong to Christ, you have crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts. That means you do not want to sin anymore. Your attitude about sin is this: you would rather die than sin; and when that becomes your perspective, you will stop your sinning. Many so-called Christians secretly still prefer sin over righteousness; but they do not carry out their preference for fear of censure from their neighbors, or punishment from God. These hypocrites are not spiritual, but carnal; they are not motivated by love, but fear; they are not under grace, but law; they have not crucified the flesh.

If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit (Galatians 5:25).

We have a great misunderstanding in our generation about the spiritual man. Many seem to think that he is primarily one who is exercising the super natural gifts of the Spirit — casting out devils, healing the sick, etc. Spirituality may include these things; however, the truly spiritual man is the morally upright man, manifesting the fruit of the Spirit in his daily walk. In certain circles of Christendom men are being taught to move in the gifts while the fruit of the Spirit is still, at best, green in their lives, and often rotten to the core. This engenders nothing but spiritual pride. In the long run, the spiritual influence expressed in the morally-upright life will have a greater impact on the advancement of the Kingdom of God than miracles, signs and wonders. Actually, when professing Christians start living holy lives, perhaps God will be able to trust them with the supernatural.

Christian Liberty

We may now return to Romans 8:9: But ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of His. If we are filled with God’s Spirit, we are not in the flesh, we are under the dominion of the Spirit. We are not controlled by our senses, passions and natural appetites; we are governed by what we know to be right, and by the Spirit of the living God. If one is filled with the Holy Spirit, he lives a holy life.

Christian liberty is the capability to overcome sin, the power to do what is right. Christian liberty is not the freedom to continue to sin with impunity — that is anarchy. Today many people talk about freedom, yet have no concept of freedom. Freedom is not the right to do as one pleases, but it is the ability to do what is right. Living as one pleases without reasonable restraint is license. It is anarchy; it is not freedom.

America’s founding fathers opposed license and anarchy. In the Declaration of Independence they defined freedom in the context of the laws of nature and nature’s God — the Supreme Judge of the Universe: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal and they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights” — God-given rights. Freedom comes from God. They understood that it was not freedom to do as they pleased — it was freedom to express themselves in the context of the laws of nature and nature’s God. Our forefathers were not lawless anarchists, nor did they consider themselves rebels. They regarded themselves as Christian patriots who were upholding God’s law in the face of a King who had become a law unto himself. For the support of their noble goals and “with a firm reliance on Divine Providence,” they mutually pledged their “lives, fortunes, and sacred honor.”

No one has expressed the relationship of freedom and law and responsibility with more grandeur than Katherine Lee Bates in the patriotic hymn, “O Beautiful for Spacious Skies,” where she says, “Confirm thy soul in self-control, thy liberty in law.”

If you have the Spirit of Christ, you walk in the Spirit; but if you are not walking in the Spirit, then the Spirit of Christ is not in you, and you don’t belong to Him — you are none of His!

Dead Bodies

10 And if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin; but the Spirit is life because of righteousness.

This verse is often interpreted as meaning simply that our bodies are destined to death as the penalty of sin, and our spirits have life on account of righteousness; but, while true, this reading seems inconsequential to the context of Paul’s basic theme. He has been arguing that because of the work of Christ and the power of the Holy Spirit, the believer has victory over sin.

Paul’s meaning, gleaned from the context, seems to be that the body is dead in respect to sin. Sin has been rendered powerless in our mortal bodies. This interpretation is in harmony with Romans 6:6, our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be destroyed, and 7:24, Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? Thus the Apostle is explaining that our bodies are no longer instruments of sin, but of righteousness.

J. B. Phillips’ translation is in accord with this explanation: Now if Christ does live in you His presence means that your sinful nature is dead, but your spirit becomes alive because of the righteousness He brings with Him. Notice Phillips does not capitalize “spirit” as the King James Version does; in this Phillips follows the practice of some other modern translations, and the context of Paul’s message. So we may conclude that as both our outer and inner man were alive unto sin and dead unto righteousness, now both are dead to sin and alive to righteousness.

Resurrected Bodies

11 But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you.

The common interpretation of this passage says that Paul is merely teaching on the resurrection of the body; but again, though true, this explanation is not relevant to Paul’s primary point of the Christian’s power over sin. The previous verse teaches that because Christ dwells in us, the body is dead to selfishness, and the spirit alive to holiness. Now we also have the Holy Spirit, who makes our bodies dynamic representatives of the truth of Jesus Christ and the power of the Spirit, inhabiting our bodies. For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us (2 Corinthians 4:6-7).

In Romans 8:9 10, Paul is carrying over the development of his thought from chapter 6. There, Christians are depicted as dead to sin with their old man crucified. As Christ was raised from the dead by the power of the Father, so are believers made alive in a similar manner in order that they may live unto God. In chapter 6, the death and resurrection of Christ are taken in the physical sense, while the death of believers and their resurrection are understood in the moral or spiritual meaning. Should we not be consistent with Paul’s previous analogy and his general purpose and understand our body’s death and resurrection in these verses in the moral and spiritual sense also?

J.B. Phillips’ translation is also harmonious with this understanding of verse 11: Once the Spirit or Him who raised Christ Jesus from the dead lives within you He will, by that same Spirit, bring to your whole being, yes even your mortal bodies, new strength and vitality. For He now lives in you.

12 Therefore, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh.

We owe nothing to the flesh. We do not have to pay homage to the flesh at all. We do not mind the flesh or walk in the flesh; we make no provision for the flesh. We owe everything to Jesus Christ. And if we truly belong to Him, there is nothing left to give to the flesh.

Who do these money changers think they are, teaching the redeemed that they still owe some debt to the flesh? They are extortionists who claim the saints still owe a debt which, in fact, has been forgiven. They need to be scourged and driven out of the temple. They are selling their false psychology, counseling skills and pastoral passion for the purpose of pampering the flesh. Who needs them? Certainly not the redeemed!

What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s (1 Corinthians 6:19-20).

We are the temple of the living God. Jesus drove those who were selling oxen, sheep and doves, along with the money changers, out of the temple. Are we to suppose He allowed a few to remain in the temple plying their sinister trade? When Jesus cleanses our temple with His blood, are we to presume He does an incomplete job? God forbid! Is He only a partial Savior? Perish the thought! Is He going to dwell among any uncleanness? No, never!

The Second Witness

Reader, if the Apostle Paul has not convinced you of complete victory over sin in this life, then will you believe John’s First Epistle? His writing is clear enough for a child to understand. Let us consider chapters 1:6-10 and 2:1-5:

1:6 If we say that we have fellowship with Him [the Bible makes no phony distinction between fellowship and relationship], and walk in darkness [continue to sin], we lie [liars shall have their part in the lake of fire], and do not the truth. Those who truly believe live by the truth.

1:7 If we walk in the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ His Son cleanseth us from all sin. As we obey the truth, the same atonement that provided the pardon for our sin will keep us from sin. This verse is not referring to a continual cleansing, because if we are walking in the truth as Jesus is in the truth, there is no sin in our lives from which we need to be cleansed.

1:8 If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us. Many stumble over this verse, often citing it as an excuse for sin to remain in the life of a believer. But we must not take this verse out of context. It is likely John is merely saying, “If we say we have not sinned, we deceive ourselves.” This explanation would be in harmony with verse 10.

Or it may be that John was speaking in reference to the liars of verse 6 who claim to be in fellowship with Christ, but continue to sin, saying, “If we claim that we have no sin, but in reality, continue to sin, we delude ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” We learned from verse 6 that if the truth is in us, we will do (obey) the truth.

Paul Stamm says, “It is remarkable that hypocrites, who want to defend sin in their lives, always try to reconcile the verses that teach that Christians do not have remaining sin (1 John 1:6, 7; 2:1, 3-5, 10, 17; 3:3, 6, 8, 9, 22, 24; 5:2, 18) with 1 John 1:8, instead of reconciling 1:8 to all these verses.”

1:9 If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. There is no forgiveness that does not include a complete cleansing.

1:10 If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His Word is not in us. Let us make sure our sins are in the past.

2:1 My little children [These are the elementary principles of the faith that new converts should understand] these things write I unto you, that ye sin not. Note carefully: John was writing this to instruct us in holiness, expecting us not to sin. Certainly, he would not then conclude we cannot help but sin. This would be contrary to sound reasoning. And if [notice if, not when; sin is not inevitable in a believer] any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous:

2:2 And He is the propitiation for our sins: and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world. We should not sin, we are able not to; but should we, let us confess and forsake it. The world is not automatically forgiven, and neither is the Christian forgiven without repentance and a renewal of his faith.

2:3 And hereby we do know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. This is the test. Reader, make sure you pass the test of obedience, or you will be lost forever. There is a final exam coming; only he that endures to the end will be saved.

2:4-5 He that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him. But whoso keepeth His word, in him verily is the love of God perfected: hereby know we that we are in Him. The Spirit’s witness to our salvation is an obedient life and a clear conscience.

Mortification

Now we may return unto Roman 8:13: For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die: but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live.

If we live to please the flesh rather than the Spirit, we will die in our sins and be damned. But if we, by the power of the Spirit, do put to death the works (selfish expressions) of the body, we shall live eternally.

The “deeds of the body” and the “works of the flesh” are metaphors to express the acts of sin. In Colossians 3:5-10, Paul uses the figure “earthly members” for sin: Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth; fornication, uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence [desire], and covetousness, which is idolatry: For which things’ sake the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience: In the which ye also walked some time, when ye lived in them. But now ye also put off all these…; And have put on the new man…. This symbol that sin is something we put off and mortify signifies, in Pauline literature, self-control over one’s physical desires and unlawful passions. Righteousness is the garment that we are to put on, but never remove.

Paul personally applied the principle of mortification: I keep under my body and bring it into subjection: lest that by any means, when I have preached to others, I myself should be a castaway (I Corinthians 9:27). Paul fully understood he had to constantly exercise self-discipline so that the natural bodily appetites would not regain control of his being; lest after all his labor for the gospel’s sake, he might still end up in Hell. The primary function of the body is to serve the will; but when the will serves the bodily appetites, the end result is damnation. God designed the body to bring the inner man into contact with the outer world so that man might influence it for good.

Paul believed that the key to keeping the flesh subdued was maintaining a pure heart: Let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water (Hebrews 10:22). As long as we maintain the right motive, our lives will reflect the light and glory of our Lord. But the person with a spurious heart has a selfish purpose with which he pursues the earthly, sensual and devilish desires of the flesh. Thus he becomes engulfed in a morass of moral and spiritual darkness.

No one ever put the principle of mortification more pointedly than Jesus: If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out, and cast it from thee….And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off, and cast it from thee. We must put off sin at all costs. It is amazing to consider that men will allow a surgeon to cut off an arm or leg to save the body for a few additional years of life; but they refuse to cast out sin, that their souls might be saved for eternity.

Jesus taught, The light of the body is the eye: if therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light. But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness. If therefore the light that is in thee be darkness, how great is that darkness! Our Lord uses the single eye as a metaphor for the singleness of purpose with which we are to pursue the highest good. As long as we keep our eye focused, we will walk in the Spirit and not fulfill the lusts of the flesh.

Jesus used the hand to symbolize putting to work our purpose. We are never to apply our hands to anything which would not glorify God. If we find our actions offensive to God, we must immediately stop the activity and cast it far from us. It is always our choice either to deny the flesh or to indulge the flesh. If we do not keep the old man dead, he will rise again to put us to death. Thank God that we are free to choose to live righteously; and when we do make the right choice, the power of the Holy Spirit is always present to help.

Where is the Spirit Leading?

14 For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.

To be led of the Spirit is to be influenced and controlled by Him. We can be sure He will never lead us into sin. All Christians submit to His command; all sinners reject and oppose Him. As we submit, He will usher us in the pathway of righteousness into Heaven, but those who reject or neglect Him will pursue the route of wickedness into Hell.

Those who obey the Spirit of God are the sons of God. They are a part of the great family of the redeemed of whom God is our Father and Deliverer. Wherefore, my beloved as ye have always obeyed,…work out (faith is our work) your own salvation with fear and trembling. For it is God which worketh (grace is His work) in you both to will and to do his good pleasure. Do all things without murmurings and disputings: That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world (Philippians 2:12 15).

This is the last warning! To break any one of God’s commandments is to break them all. No soul who has not been saved from all sin is saved by Jesus Christ. Do not foolishly plead for sin any longer. To excuse sin in any way and at the same time profess Christ is the epitome of hypocrisy. Quit siding with Satan against God Almighty. If you are in any way still relating to Romans 7, step out of that chapter now into the glorious freedom of chapter 8. How will you escape if you neglect so great a salvation? Do not be content with anything short of complete victory over sin, or your soul stands in jeopardy. I beseech you to repent and fully trust in the blood atonement for the complete cleansing of your sin. How can you claim to love your Savior and continue to sin and insult the Spirit of Grace? Sin will not be tolerated for one moment among those who truly love God. There is no partial salvation. Take hold of the following promise today; for if your flesh and body are not blameless, then your inner being is still in rebellion: And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Faithful is He that calleth you, Who also will do it (1 Thessalonians 5:23-24).

Dear reader, may you choose to believe His Word today, and walk in the Spirit unto life eternal. Amen.


ROMANS CHAPTER SEVEN:

SOLD UNDER SIN

by George E. (Jed) Smock

“I’m only human.”

“I was born this way.”

“We are still in the flesh.”

“We live in a wicked world.”

“Only Jesus was perfect.”

“Everybody sins daily.”

“We can’t keep God’s commandments; in fact, they were given to show that we can’t keep them.”

Everyone has an excuse for his sin–some are more creative than others. The excuses that have never ceased to amaze me are the theological excuses. Men actually have the gall to use the Holy Bible inspired by a Holy God to justify their unholy lives.

The second warning! If, after reading Romans 6, you are still making excuses for sin in your life, then you are not saved. Do not, with a superficial reading of Romans 7, take refuge in this chapter. Do not venture to some mealy-mouthed minister to comfort you in your sins, but weigh carefully these words, and consider your ways; for God’s Spirit will not always strive with man.

Daily I preach against sin in open-air meetings on university campuses. “Christians” are the first to confront me, with Bibles in hand, quoting scriptures to defend sin. They choose a few verses out of context and quote them over and over. Some have even lost their voices in their zeal to plead for sin. Before I arrived, few even knew that these sudden zealots were professing Christians, but now the whole student body can view their proud stand for unrighteousness.

Despite their fervent opposition, I continue to defend my stand that without holiness no man shall see the Lord (Hebrews 12:14). As the argument continues, one wild-eyed hypocrite desperately searches for more Bible verses to excuse sin in the life of a Christian. Finally, with a look of total triumph in his eyes, the student demands an opportunity to read his verses to the crowd. With a sense of smug assurance in his voice, he starts reading, For that which I would do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not; but what I hate that do I (Romans 7:15).

Romans chapter 7 is the last retreat of the religious sinner. He hides there with his mind closed, refusing to read Romans 6 or 8 and thereby put Romans 7 in its proper context.

Upon reaching Romans 7, Paul has magnificently defended the doctrine of salvation from sin by grace without the deeds of the law. He has also put to silence all his detractors who claimed that his teaching was a license to sin. Now Paul proceeds to show the purpose of the law and what life is like for man under the law.

1 Know ye not, brethren, (for I speak to them that know the law,) how that the law hath dominion over a man as long as he liveth?

The long arm of the law is an ever-present threat to those who are living sinfully, but, when a man is dead, the books are closed on any claim that the law might have against him. So it is with those that are dead to sin; the wrath of the law can no longer touch them.

To Whom Are You Married?

2 For the woman which hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband so long as he liveth; but if the husband be dead, she is loosed from the law of her husband. 3 So then if, while her husband liveth, she be married to another man, she shall be called an adulteress: but if her husband be dead, she is free from that law; so that she is no adulteress, though she be married to another man. 4 Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law by the body of Christ; that ye should be married to another, even to Him who is raised from the dead, that we should bring forth fruit unto God.

Salvation could not be, nor was it ever, by the law. God has always had one way of saving man, and that is by the grace of God, through faith in the atonement of Christ. The animal sacrifices of the Old Testament typified Christ. There were various degrees of understanding by those offering the sacrifices; but when the people offered sacrifices in faith with a broken heart, they were affirming the insufficiency of their own works and need for a blood atonement.

Noah found grace in the eyes of the Lord (Genesis 6:8) before the written law was given.

Paul used the example of Abraham to illustrate that man is not justified by the works of the law, but by faith. Romans 4:3: For what saith the Scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness. Abraham believed that in his seed (Christ) all the nations of the earth would be blessed. When was righteousness counted to him? Before he was circumcised — before the deeds of the law.

By quoting from Psalms, Paul also illustrates that righteousness comes by faith: Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man, unto whom God imputeth righteousness without works, saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered (Romans 4:6-7).

As the body of Christ was broken on the cross and raised from the dead, believers are to become dead to the old legal system with the Priesthood and animal sacrifices as provisions for the forgiveness of sin. Now we are to approach God through a new and living way. Not only are Christians dead to the rites and rituals of the law, but to its curses and penalties. We are no longer married to Moses, but to Christ. The law was given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ (John 1:17).

However, there are some similarities in the two covenants. Both the law of Moses and the law of Christ require obedience motivated by love to God and neighbor. Should the Christian return to sin, he again falls under the curses and penalties of the law. Christ has not set aside the moral precepts of the law, nor will He ever. The law of marriage remains the same with our new partner. Therefore, we must be faithful and obedient wives. But now we do have a much better husband, and we rejoice in being faithful wives. Under the old husband, we were adulteresses; and our marriage produced sin, misery, bondage and death. But now we have a new marriage, and the fruit of the new relationship is righteousness, peace, joy, freedom and eternal life.

Paul appeals to the prophet Habakkuk to further his point that it has always been faith that reveals the righteousness of God, The just shall live by faith (Romans 1:17).

Righteousness is always present in saving faith. Faith is the will embracing the truth that has been revealed to the soul. Faith is acting on the Truth.


Life in the Past and Present

5 For when we were in the flesh, the motions of sins, which were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death.

The flesh is our natural or animal-like appetites. When we are governed by these appetites, instead of our moral and spiritual nature, we are said to be in the flesh, or carnally minded. The motions of sins (our undisciplined appetites or passions) which the law exposed, wrought in us the harvest of death.

[Verse 5 summarizes the experience Paul will expound on from verse 7 to the end of the chapter.]

6 But now we are delivered from the law, that being dead wherein we were held; that we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter.

Now that we are Christians and under grace instead of law, we have a spiritual relationship with our Father far superior to the old association. We are not self-righteous, but we have submitted ourselves unto the righteousness inspired by the life and sacrifice of Christ. Our motive and stimulus for obeying is love, not simply the fact that it is written that we must obey. When we love God by serving in the Spirit, His yoke is easy and His burden is light. If we merely fear the consequences of disobedience or hope for the rewards of obedience, we are serving in the oldness of the letter, and His commandments are an unbearable burden.

It is not difficult for the loving husband to be faithful to his wife, even when they are apart for an extended season, because he would not do anything to cause her grief. He refuses even to look at another woman with wrong intentions. But the husband who merely fears the consequence of being exposed as an adulterer would find faithfulness in marriage a difficult burden. His eyes, very likely, would be wandering.

[Verse 6 prepares the reader for Paul’s description of the believer under grace, which he develops in Chapter 8.]

The Purpose of the Law

7 What shall we say then? Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known sin, but by the law: for I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet.

Paul vindicates the law against those who might argue that the law is something evil and therefore of no purpose, by explaining that the moral law is the standard or straight edge by which we judge ourselves and shall be judged. It reveals our responsibilities to God and man. Ultimately, all of the Bible is law. Every word of God, whether it be a specific command, a promise or doctrine, has some bearing on our behavior. God reveals nothing merely for the sake of information. He imparts knowledge that we might conduct ourselves in a manner that is pleasing in His sight. His law was meant to be obeyed. But when man failed to obey, the second function of God’s law came into effect to bring a quick witness against sin. The more clearly we know our duty, the more penetrating will be our awareness of failure.

Use of the law is the missing link in modern evangelism.

Evangelist Ray Comfort wrote a book on the importance of preaching the law, Hell’s Best Kept Secret. Martin Luther said, in his preface to Romans, “The first duty of the Gospel preacher is to declare God’s law and show the nature of sin.”

To mend a torn garment, you need two instruments: a needle and a thread. You prick the garment with the needle, and then you pull through the thread. Having pulled the needle through the garment, you break the thread from the needle and tie a knot, and you have a mended garment. Now, we are dealing with lives that have been torn asunder by sin. In order to mend these lives, we need two instruments: a needle and a thread. The needle is God’s law. It is the needle that we use to prick men’s hearts, to show men their sin.

After pricking men’s hearts with the needle of the law, we then pull through the scarlet thread of the gospel, that men might be justified by faith. Only then do we have a mended life; but we need both instruments: first the law, then the gospel.

Paul said, Now we know that what things soever the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law: that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God. Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in His sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin (Romans 3:19-20). We must make men see their guilt before we offer the pardon. The preaching of the law is the instrument that the Holy Spirit uses to bring conviction of sin to men’s consciences.

So often people claim, “You don’t have to tell people they are sinners, they know that.” This is not usually the case, because in our public schools and state colleges and universities, sin is simply not a part of the vocabulary. And I regret to have to say that in many of our churches today sin is not called sin — but “problems” and “hurts.” Therefore, anymore, rebels do not have a sin consciousness. They have not been taught about sin, because they have not been taught the law of God. I suppose that most people, if you were to press them individually, might admit to wrongdoing; but that is not acknowledging sin. Acknowledging sin is admitting that you have been totally wrong, and God is totally right. Seeing your sin is seeing that you have lived unintelligently, selfishly choosing your own interests over your neighbor’s and God’s, and that you are without excuse, deserving Hell. And it is God’s law — preached and proclaimed by those who raise it up as a standard — that will convict men’s hearts.

In a room there are innumerable little particles of dust floating in the air that normally are not seen. But should a sunbeam shine through the window, those motes are revealed. The law is the sunbeam which exposes the wicked heart of the sinner. Normally, the sinner keeps his shades shut in order that neither he, nor anyone else, might see his sin.

Concerning the outward keeping of the law, Paul was blameless. When the true nature of the law through the Tenth Commandment was revealed to his heart, he had to admit that he was covetous. Covetousness is sin’s perversion of love. He came to the knowledge of the root of sin, which is selfishness.

Sin Abuses the Law

8 But sin, taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence.

The law says, Thou shalt not. Rebellion says, “I shall’.” Preaching the law to a rebel can be like pouring gasoline on flames.

When the true nature of the law is revealed unto the soul, it is bound to have an impact upon a man — either he will acknowledge his sin and seek deliverance, or else he will harden his heart. Usually, the latter takes place.

Jesus taught the spirit of the law; but instead of responding positively, the Pharisees stiffened their necks. Sin (selfishness) will take the law as an “occasion” (opportunity) to lustfully debauch man’s soul. The Pharisees were adept at using the letter of the law, along with their rabbinical embellishments, as an “occasion” to make the word of God of no effect and to cover their hypocrisy. In Matthew chapter 23 .Jesus unlooses a scathing denunciation of them for this very practice: Woe unto you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for ye pay tithe of mint and anise and cummin, and have omitted the weightier matters of the law, judgment, mercy, and faith.

These hypocrites constantly used leading questions from the law to try to trick Jesus. They even appealed to the law against blasphemy to justify murdering the very Embodiment of the law. They delighted in the law with their carnal minds, but they did not have the spirit of the law, so their legalistic practices were all vain shows. Going about to establish their own righteousness, they denied and hated the righteousness which Christ exhibited. He perfectly exhibited the spirit of the law, which is love. And they delivered Him up to be crucified. Why? Because they, in fact, hated the law’s requirement of love. Since they claimed to know and understand the law, yet in spirit rejected it, their sin was greater. So the law became the very instrument which brought about their death.

Initially, the commandment stirred up in Paul (Saul of Tarsus) all sorts of selfish lusts which had been dormant in him. With self-righteous zeal, he vehemently persecuted the truth in a vain attempt to suppress his feeling of guilt. I verily thought with myself, that I ought to do many things contrary to the name of Jesus of Nazareth …. with authority and commission from the chief priests (Acts 26:912). Again, sin used the law to rationalize its insane fight against God.

8b For without the law sin was dead.

The law has a way of activating the conscience. Paul was unaware of his sin until the commandment came and awakened him from his self-righteous slumber.

9 For I was alive without the law once: but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died.

Hear the testimony of Paul, “alive” in his fleshly self-righteous hopes: Circumcised the eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew of the Hebrews; as touching the law, a Pharisee; Concerning zeal, persecuting the church; touching the righteousness which is in the law, blameless (Philippians 3:5 6). But when the true character of the law was revealed to Paul, he realized his emptiness and lack of vitality; that he was, in fact, spiritually dead. The spirit of the law brought about a consciousness of sin in his soul of which he had been unaware. Here, in coming to an understanding of the spiritual requirements of the law, Paul had taken a major step. His associates in Pharisaism merely knew the letter. Although Paul had come to understand the spirit of the law, he was still serving the letter.

10 And the commandment, which was ordained to life, I found to be unto death.

God intended the law to benefit man by showing him his duties and responsibilities. It was a fence showing God’s ownership or authority over man; but it was given also for man’s protection from what would harm him, and grieve his Owner. It was intended to protect the basic rights of everyone and promote universal happiness. But then man leaped. over the fence and was overcome by death.

The commandment revealed to Paul that he was lost, outside the fence of Divine authority and protection and dead in his trespasses and sins.

11 For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me.

Paul reiterates his point of verse 8 that sin, like a military strategist, made the law a sort of “base of operations” to deceive its victim.

Oh! The deceitfulness of sin! Will man never learn? The sting of death is sin (I Corinthians 15:56). Man’s great enemy is not death, but sin. If sin had not entered first, death could not have entered the world. We have all been stung. All have been deceived into believing that self-indulgence brings happiness, freedom and life, when, in fact, righteousness is the source of all that is good and agreeable to man.

The strength of sin is the law. The condemnation of the law provides sin its power to destroy by forbidding all transgression, and condemning those who sin to temporal and eternal death. When the moral law is broken, it can only curse the sinner; it cannot forgive him or change him; and if nothing else intervenes, man must remain ever in the kingdom of death and Hades.

But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ. But somebody does intervene — the Son of God who died and rose again to give us victory over sin, Satan, death, the grave and Hell.

Jesus is the light, above the brightness of the law, that Paul saw on the road to Damascus. He heard a voice saying, Saul, Saul, Why persecutest thou Me? it is hard for thee to kick against the pricks. Paul finally realizes that, in his self-righteous zeal, he had been resisting the very truth that could set him free from the inner turmoil which the law had wrought in his soul. And coming to true repentance and faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, he is set free from the dominion of sin and death.

12 Wherefore the law is holy, and the commandment holy, and just, and good.

Having explained that the law can neither save sinners, nor set sinners free from its power, Paul reassures us that the law is good as a rule for action revealing man’s duty and responsibility. God’s law is like the banks of a river — as long as the river flows within its banks it is a blessing to man. It irrigates his crops, it quenches his thirst, it is a source of power. But should heavy rains come, and floods result, it can become a curse. It may pollute his water supply, destroy his crops and flood his home. Each life is like a river. As long as one flows within the wholesome moral restraints of God’s law, his life is a blessing to himself and others. But should the floods of sin enter his life, and he overflow the banks of the river, his life becomes a curse to himself and others.

13 Was then that which is good made death onto me? God forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, working death in me by that which is good; that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful.

The law is not at fault in condemning the sinner. It must sentence transgressors to death, because law without sanctions is not law, but merely advice or suggestion. The wages of sin is death. The law of God is holy, just and good, in that it promotes the highest well-being of all. It reveals how exceedingly wicked sin actually is. Had God given a law that was impossible to keep, as some teach, then sin would not be sinful. Man would have to be excused for his mere shortcomings. Moral obligation necessitates moral ability. Had God given a law to man which was not possible for him to obey, then the law would be profane, corrupt and evil. And God would not be benevolent and moral, but a tyrant and a despot.


The Spirit of the Law

14 For we know that the law is spiritual.

Alas, few know this, because they only know the letter of the law (if that). They do not understand the spirit of the law. Paul served the law as a Pharisee for years before coming to an understanding of the spirit of the law. Now that he comprehends the spirit of the law, he begins a sincere struggle to obey; but he is doomed to failure without the indwelling of the Spirit of the Lawgiver.

The letter of the law deals with the outward keeping of the law. The spirit of the law is its purpose, which is to promote love to God and all beings in the universe. The letter considers only what the law actually reads; the spirit reveals its principles and meaning. The letter kills; but the spirit brings life. The letter commands, “Thou shalt not murder”; the spirit teaches whosoever hates his brother is a murderer. The letter dictates, “Thou shalt not commit adultery”; but the spirit teaches lust in the heart is adultery. Whatever the law forbids, the spirit commands the opposite. The letter of the Eighth Commandment forbids stealing; the spirit demands honesty, industriousness and generosity. The letter of the Ninth Commandment forbids bearing false witness; the spirit calls for truth.

Love to God and neighbor is the spirit of the law. By the grace of God, man can consistently obey the spirit of the law. On occasion, he may violate the letter of the law because sometimes the letter and the spirit conflict.

For example, the letter commands, Thou shalt not bear false witness. But Rahab the harlot lied when she hid the spies, violating the letter of the law. Nevertheless, God spared her, and the Scriptures commend her as a woman of faith. Love for Israel required her to break the letter and save the spies, thus keeping the spirit of the law. Also, Ehud, Gideon and Jael intentionally deceived their enemies in order to execute God’s judgment.

Jesus plucked ears of corn on the Sabbath to feed His hungry disciples and healed on the Sabbath, violating the letter of the Fourth Commandment but not the spirit, because, The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath.

Christians bore false witness to the Nazis by hiding Jews. Thus, they violated the letter of the law but maintained the spirit, because the law was given to promote life.

This principle must be understood in the context of the limitations of the Biblical law of love, not some vague, undefined, wholly individualistic, born-of the-situation, loving impulse. One must be careful he is not rationalizing away selfish motives when breaking the letter of the law. A man’s purpose must be to promote the highest good. We must be careful to avoid the pitfalls of the humanists (the godless) who promote abortion and euthanasia in the name of population control and quality of life and oppose the death penalty. The letter and the spirit forbid murder (unjustified killing) of the unborn, weak and infirm, but both the letter and the spirit command capital punishment for murder. It is exceptional in life for man to face the dilemma of the letter and spirit in conflict. There are certain commands in the letter, such as the law against adultery, that would not be violated under any circumstances.

Indeed, every time God saves a sinner from eternal death, He does not enforce the letter of the law. Jesus made an atonement for sin, thus magnifying the spirit of the law. Now the soul that sinneth shall live and not die, through faith in Jesus Christ. When the spirit of the law is amplified, the letter is also reinforced over the long run.

The Controversy

From Romans 7:14b, until the end of the chapter, we find some of the most written-about and controversial Scriptures in the Bible. Essentially, there are two points of view among commentators: one says this passage describes Paul’s experience as a mature Christian, and therefore the best experience that the Christian can hope for in this life. This view is represented by the highly-regarded evangelical, John MacArthur, who comments, “In himself, that is, in his fleshly being, a Christian is no more holy or sinless than he was before salvation” (The MacArthur New Testament Commentary Romans 1-8, Moody Press, Chicago, 1991, p. 383). This is a weak gospel, indeed, that forgives, but does not change, a man.

The opposing position is that these verses do not characterize the Christian experience at all, but Paul’s struggle to serve God under the law — convicted of his sins, but not yet converted. This latter position is the one I am going to attempt to prove.

Others have suggested that Paul is not describing his own life, but he is personifying the experience of every man, whether under the law or grace. However, since the language seems so highly familiar, I conclude he is writing from personal experience.

14b … but I am carnal, sold under sin.

The reader will note that Paul switches from the past to the present tense at this point. If he is referring to pre-Christian life, why is Paul writing in the present tense? The answer is that Paul is using a figure of speech in which a writer will change tense for dramatic effect.

There are numerous examples of this literary device in Holy Writ. Christians agree that Isaiah 53 is a prophetic passage alluding to the atonement of Christ. But the writer refers to the event as if it were in the past. He hath borne our griefs … we did esteem Him stricken…He was wounded … was bruised … the chastisement of our peace was upon Him. Isaiah is trying to convey the idea that in the mind of God the event was as good as done. But then the prophet dramatically changes to the present tense: with His stripes we are healed. Isaiah is vividly informing the reader that the atonement is so much a part of God’s plan, that those who take hold of the promise now can receive its benefits before it actually takes place in history.

Paul uses the historical present tense in I Timothy 1:15: I am chief of sinners. But are we to presume that when Paul wrote this, he meant to be understood that he was the worst practicing sinner alive at the time? Of course not. That would make him the worst liar alive. How, then, could we be expected to believe a word he said? He is using hyperbole in order to impress on the reader how wicked and ungodly he had been without the grace of God. The next verse makes this clear when he says, Howbeit for this cause I obtained mercy.

But there is another literary consideration in changing tense. From verses 7-13, Paul has been demonstrating how sin is more powerful than the law. But from verse 14 to the end of the chapter, he is explaining how sin is more powerful than unregenerate man. The change of tense indicates his shift in purpose.

The third rhetorical reason for switching the tense is to illustrate a climax in the phases of Paul’s experience under the law. Sinners are at different stages. There is the careless and self righteous sinner, who sees no need to be saved. Before the commandment came, Paul was careless and self-righteous. Then “sin revived” and he realized his lost condition, which moved him to the stage of awakened sinner. As an awakened sinner, Paul comprehended the justice, goodness and holiness of the law. The change to the present tense in verse 14 dramatically indicates to the reader that Paul is moving to a very critical stage. His destiny is hanging in the balance. He is convicted of his sins and is desperately struggling for a way out of his bondage. He cries out, I know what I ought to do, but how can I’? I am carnal, sold under sin.

We must keep this conclusion before us as we read because, in the following verses until the end of the chapter, Paul proves and demonstrates this point from his own experience.

In Romans 8:6, Paul writes, To be carnally minded is death. So we must conclude that Paul is reflecting on his experience under law, convicted, but not converted; still dead in his trespasses and sins. He is a slave under the dominion of the slave driver, sin. He is in desperate need of the Redeemer.

The next several verses with so many first person pronouns are rather confusing, and understandably so, for Paul is describing a very confused state of mind. Paul is describing the inner conflict he was experiencing, since sin had revived in his life as a result of his mind being enlightened by the spiritual requirements of the law. His mind, including his reasoning faculty and conscience, affirmed the law of God, but his flesh (natural appetites) still served the law of sin.

[Verse 25b summarizes this struggle within his being. For the sake of clarity I will note this conflict in the Biblical text.]

15 For that which I [my flesh] do I [my mind] allow not: for what I [my mind] would, that do I [my flesh] not; but what I [mind] hate, that do I [flesh].

Essentially, what Paul is describing is the conflict between the flesh (the lower part of the nature of man) and his spirit or his mind (the higher part of man’s nature). What he wants to do, he does not do; what he does not want to do, he does.

16 If then I [flesh] do that which I [mind] would not [does not approve], I [mind] consent unto the law that it is good.

He reluctantly does what his awakened conscience and reason affirms that he ought not to do, thereby, with his mind, he affirms the goodness of the law.

17 Now then it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me.

He is not denying responsibility here, but using hyperbole to describe the strength of sin that still holds him in bondage. As he has done throughout this chapter, he personifies sin as a tyrant or despot that violently controls its subjects. Of course, sin is not an actual indwelling physical or even spiritual substance; but when indulged in, it seems to take on a strength of its own, until it completely enslaves its victim. Sin is choosing one’s own gratification over the will of God. The problem in making self-gratification one’s supreme intention in life, is that self’s appetite is insatiable. The more self is given, the more it demands. Self makes increasingly unreasonable demands, until one is consumed by his own lust.

Wishful Thinking

18 For I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me, but how to perform that which is good I [mind] find not.

Paul acknowledges his own depravity. The reason nothing good dwells within his flesh is that he is still committed to selfishness, not that his flesh is innately sinful. He recognizes that he sold out to sin. And since his heart and mind are still committed (reluctantly now) to gratifying the lusts of the flesh, there is no motive within him strong enough to change his direction to perform what he knows he ought.

The expression to will is present with me is not to be understood in the literal sense of actually choosing to do something. Here will is used in the popular sense of expressing “I wish or I desire” to do good. Paul wills or desires to do good, but is still unwilling to pay the price of the self-denial that good requires. In verses 15 and 19 Paul uses the word “would” to express his wish to do the right and shun the wrong, and it is in this sense he uses will in verse 18. 1 may wish or desire to take a vacation on a faraway island, but I will not to do it because I have pressing responsibilities.

Sinners often say that they cannot go to church or they cannot give up a bad habit, when they know they should. But what they mean is that they will not, because the leisure time, or the self-gratification derived from the bad habit is more important to them.

In the last century an often-used term among theologians was the “incipiency of the will,” which means that man has the ability to originate his own actions, apart from any outside or inside influence. He can reject or accept a good influence, or acquiesce to or refuse a bad influence. It is imperative that we understand the difference between a causation and an influence. One may accept or reject an influence, but a causation cannot be resisted. Under influence we may or may not have a particular result. Under causation we are certain to have a particular result. Causation refers to the physical realm, but influence is in the realm of moral action.

What is caused cannot be free, responsible or accountable, and what is free cannot be caused or it is not free. Since man has a mind capable of feelings and perceptions, he is free, accountable and responsible.

It is truly amazing that we even have to use the term “free will,” since it is redundant. By nature, the faculty of volition implies freedom. Men intuitively know their wills are free. They may deny it in theory, but not in practice. When denied philosophically, the bottom line must be men do not want to accept responsibility for their actions. If free will is removed, then there is no such thing as morality.

Reason and conscience are arousing Paul to obey the law of God, but his flesh (his feelings, emotions and natural appetites) are influencing him not to obey. His wicked heart (purpose) is still committed to self-gratification, which prompts his will to choose to direct his mind to stay on course. He wishes to change, he desires to change, but the price of change is too great.

We must understand that there was nothing within Paul’s constitution causing him to sin. It remained his choice. Ultimately, even a slave chooses to obey his master. Granted, the alternatives are not attractive. It may mean a beating. It may even be at the risk of his life; but nevertheless, there remains the choice to disobey. Paul was a slave to sin (his own selfishness), but he was not yet willing to die to self.

19 For the good that I [mind] would I [flesh] do not: but the evil which I [mind] would not, that I [flesh] do.

He reiterates his dilemma. What a miserable man!

So many appeal to their own experience and the testimony of other “Christians” in interpreting these passages of Scripture in order to claim that this experience is universal in all believers. But notice that the language Paul uses does not describe the life of a Christian under strong temptation, occasionally lapsing into sin. The rhetoric depicts the complete dominion of sin. Since so many professing Christians of our generation do relate to this verse, no wonder that so few take the church seriously any longer. If we cannot have victory over our own sin, how can we ever hope to bring salvation to the world?

20 Now if I [flesh] do that I [mind] would not, it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me.

Paul desires to do good, but sin has such a hold on him that he does not do what he should. There was a time when he delighted to do his master’s service; but since he is no longer enthralled with doing the will of sin, but is doing it reluctantly, he poetically blames sin (the selfish life) that still reigns over his whole being.

21 I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me.

God explained to Cain, If you do well, will you not be accepted? And if you do not do well, sin is couching at the door; its desire is for you, but you must master it (Genesis 4:7, RSV). Cain did have enough regard for the good to offer to God a sacrifice of his own crops which represented his best works. But Cain’s best was not good enough because it was tainted by his own selfishness. If he had been willing to sacrifice his pride and do well by getting a lamb (typifying Christ) from his brother and sacrificing it, he would have been accepted. Cain could have mastered sin through faith in the blood sacrifice; but alas, it mastered him.

Sin was couching at the door of Paul’s heart or will, ready to attack whenever Paul attempted to break from his prison. Whenever reason and conscience would begin to influence his will, selfishness and prideful Pharisaism would raise its fierce head and beat down his intelligence.

22 For I delight in the law of God after the inward man:

With his mind he delighted in the law. This expression is very appropriate to the Pharisees among whom Paul was a leader. They received and venerated the law as the oracles of God. They were convinced that it was true. It was regularly read and expounded in their synagogues. But their minds were blinded: for until this day remaineth the same veil untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament; which veil is done away in Christ. But even unto this day, when Moses is read, the veil is upon their heart. Nevertheless when it shall turn to the Lord, the veil shall be taken away. Now the Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord(2 Corinthians 3:14-18). Paul is describing life under the law, when he, like other Jews, was still blinded by his sin because he had not yet turned to the Lord. His eyes were yet fixed on the glory of the old. But the veil, though not yet taken away, was beginning to be lifted by Christ, who was revealing to him the spiritual meaning of the law and the greater glory of grace.

Churches today are filled with people like the Pharisees. They delight in hearing the Word of God, sitting under it and talking about it, but they continue to refuse to obey it. They are hearers of the Word, but not doers. They boast of their fundamentalism, claiming to believe that every word of God is inerrant and inspired, but they still refuse to live by it. They insist that Christ died for our sins, but refuse to die with Him. They dare not question that He rose from the grave, but refuse to rise with Him to a new life of righteousness. They claim it is impossible for them to live daily according to the moral precepts of the law even under grace. They have the audacity to take Paul’s experience under law and claim that is the best that the most mature Christian can hope to achieve in this life. They refuse to believe the truth. For unto this day they read the New Testament with a veil covering their hard hearts, while claiming to be Christ’s seed. In fact, they even read the Old Covenant with the veil over their hearts, because they know not that it is their schoolmaster to bring them unto the true Christ, who would set them free from their sins, that the glory of God might be revealed in them through the Spirit of the Lord.

The prophet Isaiah cried against rebellious Israel: They seek Me daily, and delight to know My ways, as a nation that did righteousness, and forsook not the ordinance of their God: they ask of Me the ordinances of justice; they take delight in approaching to God (Isaiah 58:2). Hypocrites claim to know God and with their carnal minds delight in His ways, but refuse to obey.

23 But I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members.

What is this law of sin? For an answer, let us go back to Romans 6:16: Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness? It is a law that, when one yields his will to sin, sin so captivates the mind that it no longer has the will to follow the dictates of conscience and reason.

The law of sin is related to the law of habit. Our selfish purpose gives birth to evil acts, our acts become bad habits, our habits develop into a corrupt nature, our nature results in an immoral character and our character determines our destiny, which is eternal death. Thus men forge their own chains of slavery, as they madly pursue a life of self-indulgence. With the passage of time they become more and more bound, until they die in their sins.

Of course, the law of habit can work to our advantage. If we yield to the law of righteousness by making the right ultimate choice in life — to love God supremely and our neighbor equally — then our good thoughts become goods acts, our acts develop into proper habits, our habits produce a righteous nature and our nature results in a virtuous character, so that we are destined for Heaven.

It is crucial that we understand that a morally-depraved nature is obtained as the result of the wrong ultimate choice in life. Human beings were not designed to live supremely for their own happiness, but for the glory of God. Reason affirms that our neighbor’s happiness is as important as our own. It is contrary to the nature of things for men to live self-centered lives. The egocentric individual has chosen slavery. The God-centered person chooses freedom.

A Desperate Plea

Finally, in verse 24, Paul cries out in utter desperation, O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?

This is a contemptible and despicable man, who sold himself to the slavery of sin. Now he has realized what a hard taskmaster he has been serving, one who has enslaved him to serve the lust of the flesh. Despite his best resolutions to keep God’s law, he remains a captive to the law of sin which is in his members. He has come to the end of himself, recognizing the utter futility in trying to set himself free from this living death. Who can help him? Could it be this Jesus whom Stephen preached? Paul must have been pondering his woeful condition and considering this profound question on the road to Damascus when, suddenly, the Lord appeared unto him as his Answer and Deliverer:

25 1 thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Through Jesus Christ there is freedom from this body of death. Romans 6:6-7 says, Knowing this, that our old man is crucified with [Christ], that the body of sin might be destroyed, that hence-forth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed from sin.

Yet, Paul is still very much alive to sin in Romans 7, verses 7 24. Why? Because he had not yet been crucified with Christ he had not yet reckoned him self to be dead unto sin and alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord.

The body of sin and death had to be destroyed; to merely subdue or subject it is not enough. Paul, in his most vigorous efforts under the law, could not get the job done. Only by submitting his will to God, through faith in Jesus Christ, could the victory be achieved.

The body of sin and death is our natural appetites committed to self-indulgence. The body itself is morally neutral. The body of the unconverted person, under law, is the instrument of sin. The body of the Christian, under grace, becomes an instrument of righteousness. Christians do not have a body of sin and death. We have a body of righteousness and eternal life.

25b So then with the mind I myself serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin.

The final sentence of this chapter reiterates the experience Paul expounded in verse 5 and verses 7-24: his will was devoted to gratifying his lower appetites. He was not governed by his mind; he was not governed by his intelligence; he was not governed by the law of reason; he was not yet governed by his spirit, submitted to the Spirit of Truth — but he was still governed by his own selfish, carnal desires. He had believed the lie that righteousness came by the law. Nevertheless he had become awakened from the slumber of self-righteous hopes under the law to see his sinful, condemned and perilous state. A great warfare raged between the mind and the flesh, between what he knew he ought to do and what he did. Sin, definitely, still had control; yet he was fighting to break from his bondage.

Paul taught in Romans 5, Therefore being justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ: By whom also we have access by faith into this grace wherein we stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory of God. Paul clearly considered peace, joy and hope to be the fruit of justification (forgiveness of sins). But there is no peace, joy or hope in Romans chapter 7.

Paul’s purpose in Chapter 7 has been to prove that there is no power in the law to set us free from the dominion of sin, even for those who are struggling with their best human efforts. If we are to understand that this passage represents his best experience under grace, then we would have to conclude that grace in this present life is no more advantageous than law. Teachers who claim Romans 7 is a Christian life are trying to put Christians back under the law. These teachers are, in fact, legalists! Why do they tempt God by trying to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear (Acts 15:10)? Romans 7 was an unbearable ordeal for Paul, much worse than any of his suffering for the cause of Christ. May it never be said that this is Christianity!

Paul Lived Without Sin

Romans 7:14 24 is entirely out of character with other texts throughout the New Testament which attest to Paul’s experience in communion with Christ. At least four times he sets himself up as an example for men to follow:

Wherefore I beseech you, be ye followers of me. For this cause have I sent unto you Timotheus, who is my beloved son, and faithful in the Lord, who shall bring you into remembrance of my ways which be in Christ, as I teach every where in every church (I Corinthians 4:16 17). Christ’s ways were Paul’s ways. Was there anything in the life of Christ that indicated He did not fully perform His duty?

Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ (I Corinthians 11:1). In Romans chapter 7, Paul is not even following the law, much less Christ.

Brethren, be followers together of me, and mark them which walk so as ye have us for an ensample …. For our conversation is in Heaven; from whence also we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ (Philippians 3:17, 20). There is no Heavenly life in chapter 7 — only the earthly, legal and sensual; nor was Paul then looking for Christ to return, but his interest was in the temporal.

Those things, which ye have both learned, and received, and heard, and seen in me, do: and the God of peace shall be with you (Philippians 4:9). This is a bold statement. If Paul believed himself to be “carnal, sold, wretched and chief of sinners” at the time, would he dare issue such a challenge? Why would anyone in his right mind want to follow a miserable sinner? Paul testifies that if men do as he did, they will have peace. But there is no peace in chapter 7 because Paul is writing about the dead man, Saul of Tarsus.

Towards the end of Paul’s life when he is falsely accused by Tertullus before Governor Felix, Paul defends himself, saying, And herein do I exercise myself to have always a conscience void of offence toward God, and toward men (Acts 24:16). Unmistakably, he did not have a clear conscience in Romans, chapter 7. But Paul’s testimony as a Christian is that he always has a clear conscience.

Perhaps Paul’s strongest statement concerning entire freedom from sin is 1 Thessalonians 2: 10: Ye are witnesses, and God also, how holily, and justly, and unblameably, we behaved ourselves among you that believe. The inspired Apostle appeals both to God and men to substantiate his testimony of deliverance. This is no sinner such as we have found in Romans 7, crying out for deliverance. Paul’s statement to the Thessalonians should be one any Christian could make among his companions. Why would a man prefer to identify with the testimony of Romans 7, unless he wants an excuse to sin?

Holiness Is Not Optional

We should note that there is a school of thought that teaches that Romans 7:14-25 describes someone who has been regenerated or justified. He now needs to be sanctified, or experience a second blessing, which will set him free from the power of sin. According to this school, Romans 8 describes the sanctified life; Romans 7 depicts the merely justified life. The main problem with this view is that it makes obedience to God optional; the proponents of it are, in effect, saying one really ought to obey, but one does not have to obey. This is contrary to the whole spirit of the Bible which is a command to holiness, not a mere suggestion. Cannot these people read? Every page of the Bible includes a command to righteousness and holiness, and every page gives a promise of freedom and deliverance from sin. The man who uses Romans 7 to excuse his sin is in utter deception and will spend eternity in outer darkness.

Verse 5 of chapter 7 prepares the reader for the experience that Paul describes from verse 7 to the end: For when we were in the flesh, the motions of sins, which were by the law, did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death. Verse 5 is a past experience, but notice the change of tense in verse 6: But now we are delivered from the law, that being dead wherein we were held; that we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in the oldness of the letter. This latter verse furnishes an excellent introduction to Chapter 8 into which we will walk, if the reader dare.


INTRODUCTION: GOD’S STANDARD

More than Conquerors

The Nature of Christianity

by

George E. (Jed) Smock

GOD’S STANDARD

This series is written for those who hunger and thirst after righteousness. Only men seeking first the Kingdom of God and His goodness will be interested in these writings. The purpose of this commentary is to remove every cloak under which the sinner, especially the religious sinner, is hiding.

No one has to sin! Anyone who is walking in the Spirit is living a life far removed from sin. Anyone with sin in his life has no Biblical basis to consider himself a Christian. From the moment of conversion to Christianity until the end of a man’s life, he can and should live a life of holiness and righteousness.

No one has the right to sin! The Bible is a call to holiness from Genesis to Revelation. Would a just God command man to obey, but at the same time teach that complete obedience is impossible? It is imperative that we understand this point, if we are going to correctly comprehend the Bible. Any Biblical interpretation which gives man space to sin is an erroneous conclusion.

God is a reasonable and logical being. We are made in His image, and He expects us to approach His Written Word intelligently. It is a basic fact of logic that truth cannot contradict itself. Therefore, if our conclusions are self-contradictory, we may assume that we are in error. It is amazing how fundamentalists will fervently defend the view that there are no contradictions in the Bible, but overlook contradictions in their own doctrines.

Bible commentators are more likely to stumble over Romans chapter 7 than any other passage of Scripture. After writing forceful expositions on holiness from Romans chapter 6, they reach the pitiful conclusion that Romans 7:14-25 is the normal experience of the devout Christian. Usually Romans 8 gets them somewhat back on track, but there is no plausible way that the wretched-slave existence described in chapter 7 can be simultaneously experienced with the victory and freedom described in Romans 6 and 8.

There are two options for the one whose life does not conform to the Biblical standard of holiness: an individual may lower the requirement so that it corresponds to his present conduct; or he may raise his behavior to match the Biblical standard. When it comes to studying Romans 6 through 8, few professing Christians are able to identify with Romans 6 or 8. However, they do relate to the struggles expressed in Romans 7. They also assume that everybody in their church is going through the same conflict with sin which they are personally experiencing. Therefore, they conclude that Romans 7 must describe a Christian, because it is the only Christianity they know.

There is always a great amount of subjectivity in reading and interpreting the Bible. This is unavoidable. The danger comes when we assume our experiences are universal. If we find ourselves in association with an assembly where everyone is still sinning, it is time to seek new fellowship and, even more importantly, to seek God. All Christians should be able to identify with the testimony of John and his associates: We keep His commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight (I John 3:22).

Somehow the church has acquired the notion that it is prideful to confess to living a righteous life, but humble to confess to sinning daily in thought, word and deed. One problem is that people have self-righteousness confused with the righteousness of God. When believed from the heart, God’s righteousness always produces an actual righteousness in the life of the confessor. There is no righteousness in the life that is lived independent of our Lord Jesus Christ. For the professed follower of Christ to confess that he will habitually sin until death is not humility — it is the height of arrogance. The Biblical command is to forsake all sin as a condition of salvation, not to be a habitual sinner.

There is a general misunderstanding of spiritual warfare in our generation. The Christian’s warfare is not an inner struggle with sin, in which he hopes to have more victories than defeats; at the point of true repentance and faith in Jesus Christ, sin receives its death blow. The Christian’s battle is with temptation. His war with sin is not from within, but from without. He is to be fighting against sin in the world, not within himself. Christian combat is an offensive battle against sin, not a defensive one.

What would we think of a Commander-in-Chief who taught his countrymen at war that the enemy was always bound to be within the nation’s boundaries? Any leader worth his salt is going to settle for nothing less than a complete routing of the enemy. The aggressive commander will not stop at the enemy’s border, but will pursue him into his territory and demand unconditional surrender.

What a disgrace that we have church leaders teaching that a Christian will always have sin in his life! Hypocrites professing Christianity, yet continuing to sin, are God’s most dangerous enemies. They are moles who should not be tolerated on the grounds of the church. The church would be better served with agnostics and atheists than these creepers.

Anyone who makes peace with an enemy within his borders is, at best, a coward and, at worst, a traitor. Professing Christians who allow any vestige of sin to remain in their lives are not fit for the Kingdom. Such descendants of Judas must either repent or be denounced and forbidden to continue to weaken the Army of God.

Walking in the Spirit is written for the purpose of exposing the false notion that sin and righteousness can co-exist in the life of a Christian, or of anyone, for that matter. Defenders of that diabolical doctrine appeal most often to Romans 7 to support their defeatist dogma. My strategy is to attack this doctrine by teaching from the very text its proponents use, but in context with its surrounding passages.

More than Conquerors

Taking scriptures out of context is one of the most frequent and dangerous errors of exegesis. When Romans chapter 7 is removed from its connection with Romans 6 and 8, it can mean just about the opposite of what Paul intended. As an accomplished artist paints shade in his pictures to heighten the effect of the light, so the apostle interjects in the latter part of Romans 7 a vivid description of the tyrannical power of sin (I am carnal sold under sin) and of the unbearable burden of guilt (O wretched man that I am!). Paul’s sketch of the man who groans under the vexing yoke of sin is penciled in merely for contrast to set off the amazing difference there is between the bondage of the law of sin and death and the spirit of life and righteousness in Christ Jesus. Let us never get the glorious portrait of the Christian of Romans 6 and 8 confused with the ugly sketch of the sinner of Romans 7 trying, but failing, to serve God under the law.

Not only must the Biblical interpreter consider the context of a passage in question, but he must judge the general purpose and scope of the writer. A basic theme of Paul in Romans and all of his epistles is to promote righteousness and condemn sin (Romans 1:16-17, 2:5. 3:21, 5:19, 6:18-19, 8:4, 14:7). Interpreting the person described in the latter part of Romans 7 as any kind of Christian excuses sin and discourages righteousness.

Paul had a penchant for using military terminology to describe the Christian warfare. He was likely familiar with one of the greatest spectacles of ancient Rome: the official triumph of a returning Roman general who had slain at least 5,000 of the enemy. The grand procession formed outside the city of Rome and entered through a triumphal arch. Trumpeters led the march; next in line were floats representing the defeated cities and pictures portraying the exploits of the victors; then wagons rolled by loaded with gold, silver, works of art and other spoils of war; followed by seventy white oxen walking blindly toward their sacrificial death; then the minor officers, harpers, pipers and incense-bearers. After them rode the conqueror himself in a triumphal chariot, wearing a purple toga and a crown of gold, and bearing an ivory scepter and a laurel branch. In contrast, the captive king who followed on foot, burdened with chains, made a striking part of the show. Last, came the legions carrying their awards and each one wearing a crown. After the parade, the general mounted the Capitol to the Temple of Jupiter, Juno and Minerva, laid his loot at the feet of the gods, offered an animal in sacrifice and ordered the subjugated king to be slain as an additional thank-offering. Parties, receptions and audiences before the emperor and senate waited the returning hero.

It would seem impossible for anyone lining the parade route to have mistaken the vanquished king for the conquering general. It seems almost as impossible that any honest and intelligent reader could err so blantantly by attributing the enslaved man described in Romans 7 to the triumphant Christian of Romans 6 and 8.

No Roman would have had any excuses for the vanquished king. The senate would not have considered paying reparations to him for the rest of his life. He would not be put on the lecture circuit to be admired as a man with a message. He would not be acclaimed as a model for the military strategists to study and emulate. This disgraced and defeated king was considered worthy of nothing but an ignominious death.

So should the loser characterized in Romans 7 be put to death and not set up as any sort of example of a Christian at any stage of development. Let us acclaim and broadcast the victorious Christian of Romans 6 and 8 and not give any credibility to the miserable wretch of Romans 7. Paul claimed, we are more than conquerors (Romans 8:37). Let it never be said by the conquering Christian, That which I do I allow not: for what I would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I (Romans 7:15). This is the language of the defeatist, the coward, the sinner.

The Bible is full of examples of how God commanded not only the utter destruction of the military enemy, but also a complete purging of sin among those called His people.

Seven nations inhabited the promised land which God commanded Israel to possess. And when the LORD thy God shall deliver them before thee; thou shalt smite them, and utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant with them, nor shew mercy unto them (Deuteronomy 7:2).

In obedience to the Lord, Joshua quickly achieved a miraculous victory at Jericho. Afterwards, Israel suffered a shocking defeat at Ai because Achan had partaken from the accursed spoils of war at Jericho. Consequently, God had withdrawn His blessing from Israel. Therefore, God ordered Moses to sanctify the people and stone to death Achan and burn his body. After Achan’s execution, the LORD turned from the fierceness of His anger (Joshua 7:26). Joshua again attacked Ai, utterly destroyed the city and hanged the king.

In America’s early history, Christianity was a dominant influence in our culture and institutions. Today, Christianity has been usurped by humanism and secularism because there is sin in the visible church. The church must sanctify herself and put to death Achan, if she is going to stand against her enemies.

After the defeat of Ai, the Gibeonites, by the ruse of rags and stale bread, tricked Joshua into a protective treaty. Later, in the time of Solomon, Gibeon became a favorite “high place” of idolatrous worship for Israel.

Today many, with nothing more than a Romans 7 experience, profess Christianity and play upon the sympathies of pastors, even maneuvering themselves into positions of leadership and setting up “high places” of worship to a god of their own imagination who excuses sin.

God commanded King Saul, Now go and smite Amalek, and utterly destroy all that they have, and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass. Saul defeated the Amalekites but spared their king, Agag, and the best of their livestock. Despite Saul’s rebellion, he still tried to convince Samuel that he had obeyed the commandment of the LORD; but neither Samuel, nor God, accepted his partial obedience. And Samuel said, Hath the LORD as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the LORD? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams. For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry. Because thou hast rejected the word of the LORD, He hath also rejected thee from being king (I Samuel 15:22 23). Samuel then called for Agag, who thought he had escaped death, and cut him to pieces with his sword.

Are not our pulpits filled today with ministers who, like King Saul, are satisfied with partial obedience? Are not our pews filled with Agags who offer the sacrifices of praise and worship, but have not come to true repentance? Like Agag, they say, Surely the bitterness of death is past (I Samuel 15:32). “Surely, we will not be damned.” But surely they are deceived and will come to a bitter end, unless some Samuels rise up who wield the sword of Truth and put to death Agags’ fleshly, carnal appetites before the angel of death casts them to perdition.

When Israel abode in Shittim, the men committed whoredom with the daughters of Moab, and Israel sacrificed to their idols. God was so angry He ordered Moses to hang the whoremongers. Meanwhile, as Israel was weeping before the door of the tabernacle, an Israelite named Zimri and a Midianitish woman named Cozbi began to fornicate in the sight of Moses and the congregation of Israel. Thank God, a man of Israel called Phinehas rose up from the worshippers, took a javelin in his hand, ran to the lewd couple and thrust the javelin through the back of the man into the belly of the whore. So the plague was stopped among Israel, but not before 24,000 died. And the LORD spake unto Moses, saying, Phinehas, the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the priest, hath turned My wrath away from the children of Israel, while he was zealous for My sake among them, that I consumed not the children of Israel in My jealousy. Wherefore say, Behold, I give unto him My covenant of peace: And he shall have it, and his seed after him, even the covenant of an everlasting priesthood; because he was zealous for his God, and made an atonement for the children of Israel (Numbers 25:1013). Evidently, Phinehas was a type of the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ.

As Christendom mourns over our porno-plagued culture, the fornication and adultery running rampant in our sanctuaries of praise and worship is overlooked. My prayer is that this book will become a javelin in the hands of some Phinehases who will thrust the Truth into the hearts of those who have ears dull from hearing a gospel that makes place for sin in the lives of those who claim to be Christians.

The Nature of Christianity

Among professed Christians, there are two distinct views of salvation. They are represented by two different schools of “believers,” both of whom claim to be members of Christ’s church.

One school sees salvation primarily as forgiveness for sin in order to reach Heaven. Meanwhile on earth, “miserable sinners” strive to obey, but have no hope of overcoming “indwelling sin,” until death. After accepting Jesus as one’s personal Savior from Hell, man struggles to make Christ the Lord of his life. There is a definite distinction between man’s standing before God and his actual state or condition. This means that even though God considers man justified and righteous, man continues to sin daily in thought, word and deed. Our works definitely play no part in our relationship with God or our ultimate destiny. This view is the majority opinion in American Christendom at the close of the Second Millennium. Because of the dominance of this school of thought, Christianity has become a weak influence on our culture and institutions.

The other school views Christianity as a right relationship with God. Salvation includes complete deliverance from the power of sin in this present life, and forgiveness of the penalty of sin, which is eternal damnation. The redeemed challenge man to repent and turn to God, through faith in Jesus as both Lord of one’s life and Savior from all sin. True saints believe that one cannot be considered justified or righteous in the sight of God without being pure in heart and life. If Christianity is going to be a powerful influence into the twenty first century, this understanding of Christianity must once again prevail.

Both schools of thought have appealed to selected verses from the book of Romans to affirm their understanding of the gospel. Controversy concerning the nature of the gospel is nothing new. The church at Rome was rife with doctrinal strife and disagreement. In the first five chapters of Romans, the Apostle Paul emphatically defends the gospel of salvation by the grace of God through faith in Jesus Christ. He denies that there is any hope for sinners to be justified by the law, which they had broken. He exposes and condemns false teaching which threatened to put the Roman church under bondage to the rites and rituals of Judaism. Romans chapters 6, 7 and 8 represent the very heart of Paul’s epistle. In these chapters, he explains man’s failure under law, and, under grace, his mastery over sin.

In chapter 5, Paul shows that because natural law (the law of reason and conscience) was broken by Adam and his descendants, eventually the written law, the law of Moses, was given to the Jews. Because man had failed to live sensibly by responding to the influences of reason and conscience, God put everything down in writing, so there would be no more misunderstanding of what He expected from man and what man could expect from Him. The written law gave God the opportunity to plainly show man His true character. Its moral precepts reveal the Holiness of God; its penalties pronounce His Justice; its sacrifices herald His desire to pardon the awful penalty of sin. All the commandments, especially the first four, reveal God’s longing for a special, loving relationship and delightful fellowship with man.

Paul writes, The law entered, that the offence might abound. God had made the way plain: Do these things and live (Romans 10:5). God established a system of animal sacrifices as object lessons to show the awfulness of sin. These blood sacrifices also pointed man to the Savior Messiah who was to come. The people acknowledged the goodness of the law and promised to obey (Deuteronomy 6:24; Exodus 24:3). But, alas, they quickly rebelled. Therefore, sin abounded all the more. Since they had rejected greater light, their guilt and responsibility multiplied. Blame is always measured in the light of knowledge. Therefore, the law brought even more of God’s wrath on man; and the law became a curse instead of a blessing.

Paul concludes chapter 5 with the startling statement: But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound. Sin provided God with the astonishing opportunity to demonstrate His nature and character in an even more revealing way than the law ever could have done. The failure of man under the law gave God the occasion to commend His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us (Romans 5:8). Grace abounded to undeserving sinners! The greater the sin, the more bounteous the grace that was needed to forgive. But God’s grace offered much more than forgiveness. It extended deliverance (freedom) from the power of sin and death. It gave man a restored relationship, renewed fellowship and revitalized communion with his glorious Creator. It empowered man to live the abundant life that our Lord promised to all who follow Him. In Romans 6, Paul unfolds the might and victory experienced by all who believe the gospel and obey the Truth.

Warning! Before you read another word! Are you ready for true freedom from sin? If you are content to dabble in sin here and indulge there, do not turn another page! Do not read any further! Do you really want the abundant life, joy unspeakable and peace that passes understanding? Or are you content to struggle along naming the name of Christ and yet living a frustrating, embarrassing and defeated life? If you read on, you will be accountable for the truth God reveals; and a refusal to act will bring greater damnation. Will you take up your bed and walk? Will you be made whole? Will you walk in the Spirit? You have the freedom to choose….

Part 2 “SERVANT OF RIGHTEOUSNESS” coming tomorrow


“A double minded man is unstable in all his ways”. (James 1:8)

As I was pondering this scripture this morning I heard the Spirit saying – “A double minded man is like he who is married and has a mistress, he torn between the two and faithful to neither”!

It really speaks to me (this verse) about not being tied to the world and attempting to serve the Lord as well – for you will be torn between the two and faithful to neither. Over the years as I look back I can see areas in my own life where this was the situation. I wanted to serve the Lord with my whole life, yet the things of this world would catch my eye and I would wonder between the two, often times with such an empty feeling in my heart.

This scripture also speaks to me about how we live our lives as Christians amongst each other. A double minded person will speak nice in the comfort of your company, then in the dark place will rip you to shreds with accusations while wadding stepping in the spiritually dark streams of gossip. Most often it is because they feel justified in doing so for they believe they have been shorted in some form or another. I find this often when people are jealous of others blessings or they see others being promoted in the church or work place before them and they feel that they should have been chosen.

I believe one of the reasons that I am able to discern this with people is because I once was a prisoner to double mindedness having been imprisoned in the same prideful spiritual darkened prison that they are standing in. It a punishing prison because you start to build up a false spiritual perception of how great you are to the point that you begin to become bitter, resentful and totally opposite of what the Lord has desired and purposed you to become. It will cost you friends,family, peace and joy. One must be like David and cry out to the Lord “Examine me, O God, and know my mind. Test me, and know my thoughts. See whether I am on an evil path. Then lead me on the everlasting path”. (Ps 139:23-24)

I remember when the Lord was dealing with me about this, Holy Ghost would softly speak to me the word “self-righteous judge” and then would show me where I had allowed the enemy to enter in through the door of rejection, which was held open with a spiritually door jam of pride. I would see the person or person who I had felt justified in believing that I had in some way been wronged by them and now I was passing false judgment upon them. Let me tell you what, when Holy Ghost brought that into a full revelation in my heart it was a battle in which my fleshly heart was torn to bits for the Light of truth shall always prevail over the lies of Hell. To this day I still ask Holy Ghost to search my heart and remove any wrongful thinking that has set itself up against the Word of God!

We need to be very cautious in regard to double mindedness friends – We must submit ourselves Holy Ghost and take action against every thought that enters our mind, by weighing them up against the Word of God in truth. Because if we do not we will battle with ungodly sinful, prideful, selfish and judgmental thoughts in our mind as the struggle between knowing what the Word says and what the flesh is saying will be tormenting. If we are not careful, our hearts can become hardened to the point where we no longer listen to what the Word and Holy Ghost is saying and begin to live having only the guidance of our own hearts, which we Know are deceptive and filled with darkness.

In this text I believe James is speaking of one who has his foot in two kingdoms, that of God’s and that of Satan’s –stuck between the promises of the Lord and the false promises of the world – one moment he appears to be following the Lord and in the next he appears to be following the ways of world – he at one moment believes the promises of God and the next moment being enticed by the desires of his heart chases after the false promises of the world – unstable is he for at any moment he might well place both feet in the wrong kingdom – he is as one teetering on the fence of his life’s path and we must be walking with Holy Ghost discernment being aware and on guard for such a person for in his indecision he might well reach out and grab hold of one who is yet matured and drag them along with him in his fall.

Friend, if this message is speaking to you today and you find that you two have been living a double life, with one foot in the Kingdom and one in the world – The Lord is standing at the door of your heart, desiring to come into your life with His fullness , bringing spiritual healing that you shall not be found as one being double minded in all your ways. That you not be found as one who is unjust in your judgments against your brothers and sisters in the Body. Jesus is indeed the Great Physician who will come in to do spiritual surgery in your life, you might well feel a little pain here and there, yet once it is completed you will see no scars and you will be spiritually restored!

Let us pay this prayer:

Lord let us not think so highly or ourselves. Let our spirit be humble and let us be critical of our own lives and of our own relationship with you. I ask that you help us to remove the beams from our eyes, not that we would cast bitter judgment, so we help one another remain faithful to your calling. Lord, let us not be as those who are double minded, tossed to and fro between Your righteous and Holy ways and that of the ways of this world. Father we thank you for Your Son, Holy Ghost and the cross which liberates us, destroying the very power of sin in our lives – Sent Holy Ghost today in to our hearts with the holy fire of truth that we may set free form all spiritual prisons in our lives. Refine us, mold us, break us, reform us into the image of Christ. Let our lives be lived so that others may call you faithful. Open our eyes to the pain in this world so that we can be used by you as instruments of change. In the Mighty and Powerful Name of Jesus, Amen

Friends, today the Father desires for you to walk in the purpose of your life – that you may experience everything that He has planned for you since before the world was formed. He loves you and desires only the best for you. He has never promised that we would all spend our time here on the earth resting on the mountain tops of comfort, being pain free – Yet He has promised to be a Father to us, a true King and such a King that has not left us unprotected or with out a guide – For He has sent Holy Ghost to be with us every step of the way – He has promised that He will never leave the side of His children or leave them orphaned– that He has encamped warriors about us, having sent forth His Angel’s to minister unto us.

If you have been walking in the valley of defeat, today is the day to start walking in the valley of victory – Allowing Holy Ghost to lead you through the valley of decision, where you surrender every right, action, word and thought to the Lordship of Jesus Christ, committing you whole life, every area into His hands.

Today we must be totally severed from the ways of this world, though we live in this world, our allegiance must be to the Kingdom of God – We must no longer be a bride who has a lover on the side for we can not serve two masters – being divided between to allegiances- we must allow Holy Ghost to remove all double mindedness in our lives- We must start living as true citizens of His Lordship and begin living in the Kingdom culture as Jesus taught us to live – not tossed about by the doctrines of this world and the doctrines of men – rather being fully engaged in and motivated, being led of Holy Ghost according the doctrines of our Christ, Yeshua!

For indeed we serve an Awesome God,

IHS,

Russ Welch


UNIVERSAL RECIPROCITY

Universal reciprocity can be viewed as The Universal Bank in Heaven. It is the only completely secure bank. All other banks can fail, but our deposits are secure in God’s bank. Just as a natural bank is a place where we deposit our money or treasures until we call for them, so the bank of heaven is a depository for our treasures until we call for them. The enemy would like for us to believe that we cannot make withdrawals from the bank of heaven now, that we must wait until we die and go to heaven to have any use of our account in heaven. That same enemy desires that we believe everything about heaven pertains to only the future, and not now. This would be like a bank forbidding us the use of our checking account. Yes, we are to lay up treasures in heaven, not on earth. But where does Scripture say that we must die and go to heaven to before we can access them?

We are being used of God in the business of ruling and reigning on earth with Him. We are God’s earthly managers bringing forth His will on earth as it is in heaven. God’s universal laws govern the working arrangement between God and His earthly managers (mankind). As good managers of God’s assets we are instructed to lay up treasures in heaven by faithfully and obediently managing our lives and all He has put into our hands. We are clearly instructed not to gather treasures on earth for ourselves.

Matthew 6:19-20: “Do not lay up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy and where thieves break in and steal; but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroy and where thieves do not break in and steal.”

Meeting needs of mankind and the world around us makes a deposit in our account in the universal bank in heaven. We are God’s possession and all that is in our hands belongs to Him. Our personal accounts in heaven are His riches reserved for us. When we have need, God supplies all our need according to His riches in glory.

Philippians 4:17: Not that I seek the gift, but I seek the fruit that abounds to your account.

Matthew 19:21: Jesus said to him, “If you want to be perfect, go sell what you have and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow Me.”

1 Peter 1:4: …to an inheritance incorruptible and undefiled and that does not fade away, reserved in heaven for you.

Phil 4:19: And my God shall supply all your need according to His riches in glory by Christ Jesus.

SOWING AND REAPING

One of the major banking laws governing business activities of the “Universal Bank in Heaven” is the universal law of sowing and reaping. In the realm of physics, this law may be expressed as the law of cause and effect. Isaac Newton said, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.” In the realm of finance, one might refer to it as the law of investment and return. A preacher might express it as giving and receiving. The farmer would speak of planting and harvesting. In any case, the law always involves a costly sowing process. We must take what we have and plant it. We may desire to consume it, but we know there will be no harvest if we do not plant.

Psalm 126:5-6: Those who sow in tears shall reap in joy. He who continually goes forth weeping, bearing seed for sowing, shall doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing his sheaves with him.

Galatians 6:7-l0: Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, that he will also reap. For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption, but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life. And let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart. Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all, especially to those who are of the household of faith.

We will reap what we sow, if we do not lose heart. We must patiently wait and remain until harvest time. All sowing requires a period of natural growth before harvest. If we, for any reason, lose heart and leave or quit before the harvest time, we will miss the harvest. It may be wasted or another may gather the harvest we planted. Man does not decide when it is harvest time; the crop does. We must be available and ready to put in the sickle immediately when the harvest time comes.

No one can reap until someone has sown. To look for a harvest without sowing means that we are looking to receive from what someone else has sown. This is like borrowing and must be paid back. The account books will be balanced. To continue to borrow (seeking to reap without sowing) will put us further and further in debt and into the bondage of lack. It’s much the same as if we continued to borrow money from a natural bank, but made no payments. We are given an original inheritance in our account but if we never use it to do good, we make no deposits. Our inheritance will soon be gone and we will have nothing in the universal bank to draw upon.

We are to sow (doing good) to all, but especially to those of the household of faith. The more we can do to really meet the needs of God’s people and all mankind, the more we will reap. Helping to provide food for people by farming, processing, or distributing, is sowing. Using what we have to manufacture and distribute or otherwise provide clothing, clean water, adequate housing, transportation, medical services, and so on are forms of meeting needs. Mankind’s greatest need is to be rightly related to God. Preaching and teaching the Word of God, bringing forth the ministry of Jesus by the Holy Spirit to save, heal and deliver is a major area of meeting human needs. The more we do to establish systems or provide resources to accomplish these things, the more we will reap.

2 Corinthians 9:6-12: But this I say: “He who sows sparingly will also reap sparingly, and he who sows bountifully will also reap bountifully. So let each one give as he purposes in his heart, not grudgingly or of necessity; for God loves a cheerful giver. And God is able to make all grace abound toward you, that you, always having all sufficiency in all things, have an abundance for every good work. As it is written: ‘He has dispersed abroad, He has given to the poor; His righteousness remains forever.’” Now may He who supplies seed to the sower, and bread for food, supply and multiply the seed you have sown and increase the fruits of your righteousness, while you are enriched in everything for all liberality, which causes thanksgiving through us to God. For the administration of this service not only supplies the needs of the saints, but also is abounding through many thanksgivings to God.

Hebrews 6:10: For God is not unjust to forget your work and labor of love which you have shown toward His name, in that you have ministered to the saints, and do minister.

Becoming Better Managers

Who can meet more needs for mankind, the skilled or the unskilled, the diligent or the slothful, those with Godly wisdom or the unwise, the one who cares for others or the one who cares only for himself, the one who receives wise counsel or the one who listens only to himself, the one who labors or the one who talks idly? The one who meets more needs is making more deposits and subsequently will reap more from the Universal Bank in Heaven.

It is not necessary that men know the good we do. The return does not depend on men. It depends on God and His accounting and reward system in Heaven. We will be rewarded openly for using that which we have to meet the needs of others in secret. Prayer and fasting makes a deposit in the Bank of Heaven. Anything that meets human need, especially the needs of the brethren, makes a deposit.

Matthew 6:1-4,6,17-18: “Take heed that you do not do your charitable deeds before men, to be seen by them. Otherwise you have no reward from your Father in Heaven. Therefore, when you do a charitable deed, do not sound a trumpet before you as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets, that they may have glory from men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their reward. But when you do a charitable deed, do not let your left hand know what you right hand is doing, that your charitable deed may be in secret; and your Father who sees in secret will Himself reward you openly.” “But you when you pray, go into your room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in the secret place; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly.” “But you, when you fast, anoint your head and wash your face, so that you do not appear to men to be fasting, but to your Father who is in the secret place; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly.”

Giving to a person or an organization that is meeting human needs makes a deposit. Investing in a company that is meeting human needs makes a deposit.

The amount of return is based on the net value produced. It costs something to maintain our life and any system of endeavor. The net product is what is left of the value we added after subtracting the value that we consumed or used.

There is positive and negative sowing. If we do good to one person but take away from another, the value we added to mankind is lessened by the amount of negative we sowed. If we go out to help the world but offend our own children, we may take away as much or more than we deposited. The net value added to mankind is our deposit in the Bank of Heaven. If we have not been giving to God by adding value to mankind but have been consuming all God has placed into our hands, we have been robbing God – robbing the bank of heaven.

Malachi 3:8-9: “Will a man rob God? Yet you have robbed Me! But you say, ‘In what way have we robbed You?’ “In tithes and offerings. You are cursed with a curse, for you have robbed Me, even this whole nation.”

Jesus said that when we give to the brethren, we give to Him. We give to God by giving to others. Our gift to an organization is a gift to God only if the organization is meeting people’s needs.

Malachi is a transitional book. It is the last book of the Old Testament and in part speaks into the New Testament. The tithe was God’s instruction in the old covenant law that does not transcend into the kingdom. In the new covenant we, and all that we have in our hands are God’s. We are to administer it according to His instruction. In the time of the old covenant, they did not have the indwelling Holy Spirit to guide and empower their lives. Basic laws and rules and the words of the prophets were the Israelites primary forms of direction. There was no potential for them to all become priests and kings as in the new covenant. Rather, God appointed some to be priests and sent prophets to anoint some as kings.

In the kingdom our lives are about giving and serving God by serving His people. We are to be hearing and obeying God’s desire and direction as to how and where we give or serve. In so doing, our treasures are stored in heaven to be drawn upon as needed to provide for meeting more needs in obedience to God’s direction through the Holy Spirit.

There is no room in the kingdom for greed and covetous practices such as have perverted the ways of people, including many Christians, in past centuries. Failure and depletion of available provision comes from the disobedience of keeping back for ourselves what God has given us to invest in meeting needs, which is the business of kingdom management.

Keep on Pursuing Love
It Will Never Fail,

Ron McGatlin

http://www.openheaven.com
basileia@earthlink.net


Do we have peace in our hearts or does fear, worry and anxiety grip our heart relentlessly? Can we have wonderful peace in our hearts even during these troubled times? God in His goodness promises peace so let’s examine in more depth this awesome promise from the Bible. The fourth characteristic of the goodness of God revealed in the covenant redemptive names of Yahweh is set forth in the book of Judges.

Judges 6:11-16 (American Standard Version):

And the angel of Yahweh came, and sat under the oak which was in Ophrah, that pertained unto Joash the Abiezrite: and his son Gideon was beating out wheat in the winepress, to hide it from the Midianites.

And the angel of Yahweh appeared unto him, and said unto him, Yahweh is with thee thou mighty man of valor.

And Gideon said unto him, Oh, my lord, if Yahweh is with us, why then is all this befallen us? and where are all his wondrous works which our fathers told us of, saying, Did not Yahweh bring us up from Egypt? but now Yahweh hath cast us off and delivered us into the hand of the Midianites.

And Yahweh looked upon him, and said, Go in this thy might, and save Israel from the hand from the hand of the Midian: have I not sent thee?

And he said unto him, Oh, Lord, wherewith shall I save Israel? behold, my family is the poorest in Mannaseh, and I am the least in my father’s house.

And Yahweh said unto him, Surely I will be with thee, and thou shalt smite the Midianites as one man.

Joshua had successfully led the children of Israel into the promised land of Canaan and instructed them before His death. He advised them to love the Lord God and know in their heart and soul that not one good thing that God had spoken concerning them had failed to come to pass. He told them to cleave unto the Lord and serve Him with sincerity and truth, and warned them of the consequences of serving other gods. Joshua wrote all these words in the book of the law of God and made a covenant with Israel that they chose to serve Yahweh. He sealed this covenant with a great stone that he set under an oak tree as a witness to Israel of their promise to God. After Joshua died, it was not long before Israel forsook the Lord, forgot this convent, and began to serve Baal, Ashtaroth, and other gods of the surrounding nations. This dramatically weakened Israel spiritually as a nation, and they could no longer stand against their enemies. When Israel became greatly distressed and cried out to the Lord, He would send a judge to deliver them from the hand of their oppressors. But once the judge died, they fell back into running after false gods to serve and worship them.

In Judges chapter 6, Israel had forsaken the Lord again and pursued their evil way of life, cleaving unto the powerless gods of their enemies. This new generation of Israelites had forgotten that only the Lord was Yahweh Jireh, who provided for every one of their needs; that only the Lord was Yahweh-Rapha who healed them in every way, and that only the Lord was Yahweh-Nissi, who brought them victory and protection from their enemies. The Midianites rose up and gained a stronghold in their country and oppressed Israel for seven years. Midian and her allies, which included the Amalekites, swarmed like locusts down on Israel with great hordes of men and animals and destroyed their crops and animals, bringing great impoverishment on Israel. The Israelites were hiding in dens and caves in great fear of their lives, without food and supplies to survive. They cried out in desperation to the Lord again and in great mercy and love, He moved greatly to help His people and reveal to them another magnificent aspect of his goodness.

God sent His angel to seek out a very simple man from a poor background to deliver His people from a massive and powerful enemy who was laying waste to the promised land of Israel. At that time, Gideon was hiding in the winepress, threshing some wheat so he could eat and survive. Yet God had other plans for Gideon, as He sent his angel to announce to him the awesome things He was going to do in his life and for his country. God called Gideon “a mighty man of valor” and “a valiant warrior” as God saw Gideon for what He would become when Yahweh worked in his life. God saw Gideon’s potential as a victorious warrior, a fearless leader and a future judge of Israel. God took a man who was behind closed doors in fear and exalted him to the position of valiant warrior, giving him the privilege to lead God’s people into victory and peace.

Judges 6:22-24 (American Standard Version):

And Gideon saw that he was the angel of Yahweh; and Gideon said, Alas, O Lord Yahweh! for as much as I have seen the angel of Yahweh face to face.

And Yahweh said unto him, Peace be unto thee; fear not: thou shalt not die. Then Gideon built and altar there unto Yahweh and called it Yahweh-Shalom: unto his day it is yet in Ophrah of the Abiezrites.

Gideon finally accepted the call of God on his life and built an altar calling it Yahweh-Shalom, which means “the Lord our peace.” God showed him that he can have peace, even in the midst of life’s most difficult circumstances. The fourth characteristic of the goodness of God revealed in His name is peace. In Hebrew, the word for peace, shalom, means: wholeness, completeness and soundness; it’s a harmony and unity of heart and soul because of a restored relationship with God, our Father; it is an inward and outward tranquility, a quiet assurance and a complete well-being where nothing is lacking or broken.

Peace is the symphony and harmony of life, in which you enjoy all that is good because of your right relationship with God. It’s the freedom from being disturbed, agitated, stressed and troubled. It is the absence of discord, strife, and anxiety. It is to be at ease and calmly unaffected by circumstance. Peace is the highest measure of contentment, joyfulness, happiness, and satisfaction in life. There is absolute security, safety, and victory at the center of peace. It is the absence of inward conflict, condemnation, and torment, but rather a state of rest, calmness, and quiet confidence.

True peace is oneness and complete unity with Yahweh-Shalom, where there is a wonderful mutual sharing of the enjoyment of that bond and relationship. Yahweh-Shalom is the origin and source of all peace and we have and enjoy peace because of our relationship and oneness with Him. His peace is our peace. His wholeness is our wholeness. His soundness is our soundness. His completeness is our completeness. No man or woman can ever have peace without a vibrant, living fellowship and right relationship with Yahweh-Shalom.

You can’t buy peace, you can’t medicate peace, and you cannot manufacture peace. You cannot produce peace from some mental gymnastic exercise or self-help book or seminar. It is impossible to have peace apart from Yahweh-Shalom. There is and never will be true peace for the unbeliever.

Isaiah 57:19-21 (New Living Translation):

I will comfort those that mourn bringing words of praise to their lips. May they have abundant peace, both near and far, says the Lord, who
heals them. But those who still reject me are like the restless sea, which is never still but continually churns up mud and dirt.

There is no peace for the wicked, says my God.

Isaiah 59:8 (NIV):

The way of peace they do not know; there is no justice in their paths. They have turned them into crooked roads; no one who walks in them
will know peace.

To the unbeliever who rejects Yahweh-Shalom, his life will be like a troubled, restless sea. There is no calmness, no rest, no quietness, and no tranquility of heart and soul to those hostile toward God Almighty and His goodness. Picture in your mind a rough and raging sea, as the waves crash all around and the sea rises violently up and down, churning up all the muck and mire of its bottom. This is a vivid illustration of the heart of someone who does not know Yahweh-Shalom. His heart is a continual state of unrest and instability, tossed around by the raging waves of circumstances, troubles, and problems, contaminated by the muck and mire of sin. But when a man or woman turns to God and gives their heart and soul to Him, Yahweh-Shalom brings comfort, rest, healing, and abundant peace, as He calms the furious seas of a person’s soul.

The peace of God is where the stillness, calmness, and quietness of God reign unbroken and undisturbed. Picture a beautiful serene lake that is perfectly still with only a gentle breeze and crystal clear water. The lake is calm and tranquil, with the sun glistening off the waters. This is a vivid illustration of the heart and soul of someone who has the peace of Yahweh-Shalom in their life. Yahweh-Shalom is the way of peace, as He provides the direction and road to travel in life, in order to accomplish His purposes and have abundant, cleansing peace.

The wicked follow a crooked path that only leads to frustration, anxiety, and unrest, as it never leads to peace. God wants us to know and experience His awesome peace from the morning sunrise until the evening ends. Nothing is more refreshing, healing, and exhilarating to experience than the peace of God.

Psalm 29:11(Amplified):

The Lord will give unyielding and impenetrable strength to His people; the Lord will bless His people with peace.

Isaiah 26:12 (New Revised Standard Version):

O Lord, you will ordain peace for us, for indeed, all that we have done, you have done for us.

Jeremiah 29:11 (Amplified):

For I know the thoughts and plans I have for you, says the Lord, thoughts and plans for welfare and peace, and not for evil, to give you hope in your final outcome.

We, as God’s children, have the blessing of His peace, and He has ordained the path and way of peace for each believer’s life. God wants us to live and abide in His peace in everything we do. His refreshing peace should be a vital, living reality in our daily walk with Him. The peace of God should penetrate our thoughts and actions as we build our lives on the foundation of His peace.

Psalm 72:7 (God’s Word to the Nations):

May righteous people blossom in his day. May there be unlimited peace until the moon no longer shines.

Job 22:21: (New King James Version):

Now acquaint yourself with Him, and be at peace. Thereby good will come to you.

God wants you, as His beloved son or daughter, to blossom and flourish in life like a beautiful flower, and be filled to overflowing with His unlimited peace. There is no boundary or limit to the peace of Yahweh-Shalom. God does not want a speck or a brief flurry of peace for you, but desires His boundless peace to permeate every fiber of your being. The peace of God should be our lifestyle and our way of living. We must acquaint ourselves with our Heavenly Father and build our intimate relationship with Him, in order to live and abide in His peace.

The word “acquaint” in the Hebrew means: to know intimately, to show harmony with, to cohabit with, to come home and to be familiar with. The essence of the word is to know and experience such a close and personal relationship with someone, that we cherish and treasure everything about it. God wants us to come to Him and know Him in an intimate, close, and harmonious relationship, where we feel completely at home in His presence. God wants us to cherish and love Him deeply, and as our relationship grows with Him, then our lives will be at peace and all the goodness of God will flourish in us. God’s goodness flows out of our union with Him. When we learn how to live and abide in His peace, then the goodness of God will be manifest in our thoughts and actions.

The goodness of God and the peace of God are intertwined companions and cannot be separated by any earthly circumstance or power. The peace of God rests on the foundation of His goodness.

Isaiah 26:3 (Amplified):

You will guard him and keep him in perfect and constant peace whose mind [both its inclination and its character] is stayed on You, because he commits himself to You, leans on You, and hopes confidently in You.

Gibbs :

God keeps him in perfect peace whose mind is union with Him through loving trust.

When our mind is in union with God and we lean on Him, commit our way to Him, and believe confidently in Him, our lives will be in constant and perfect peace. The word “stayed” in the Hebrew means: to lay, support, lean and rest upon; to sustain and uphold.

What supports your thought life? What do you lean your mind on when times get tough? What do you rest your mind upon in your daily living? Our minds as Christians should be sustained, upheld, and supported by being intently focused on God and His Word.

The word “mind” in the Hebrew expresses the whole direction and attitude of one’s life. It is everything we fashion and form in our mind, which includes thoughts, purposes, desires, goals, ideas, considerations, and reflections. Everything we devise in our mind should rest and lean upon God. Our mind should be stayed, focused, and immersed in our loving Heavenly Father. The whole direction of our thoughts, actions, and desires should be firmly supported and established in God.

Then God will keep us in the center of His perfect peace. God guards and protects your peace when you are focused on Him, and nothing the world throws at you can rattle or disturb your peace. The words “perfect peace” are shalom, shalom and the doubling of the word emphasizes that it is an absolute truth that God has established; it is even more certain than any natural law like gravity. The word is doubled to show the abundance and completeness of his peace available to the believer who trusts and centers his mind on Him.

Romans 8:6(b) (KJV):

But to be spiritually minded is life and peace.

Psalm 119:165 (Amplified):

Great peace have they who love your law; nothing shall offend them or make them stumble.

Psalm 4:8 (Amplified):

In peace I will both lie down and sleep, for you, Lord, alone make me dwell in safety and confident trust.

Life and peace abound in the life of a man or woman who has their thoughts focused on God and His Word. When we love God’s Word, meditate upon it, and hide it in our hearts, great abundant peace will flow through every part of us. Absolutely nothing in the world will cause us to stumble, for we are rooted and grounded in His peace. We have confident trust in the Lord and the complete safety and protection He provides, so every night we enjoy the sweet sleep of peace. Nothing disturbs us; nothing rattles us, and nothing agitates us, for we have His peace.

Psalm 55:18 (Amplified):

He has redeemed my life in peace from the battle that was against me [so that none came near me], for they were many who strove with me.

We can have the peace of Yahweh-Shalom overflowing in our heart in the midst of any battle we will ever face in life. No matter how difficult the circumstance or how hard the problem, we can train our mind and heart so that we live and abide in His peace. We have a quiet assurance and an inward tranquility for we rest in the loving arms of our Heavenly Father who protects, sustains, and shields from every harm, every attack, and every enemy.

Romans 5:1 (Amplified):

Therefore, since we are justified (acquitted, declared righteous, and given a right standing with God) through faith, let us grasp the fact
that we have (the peace of reconciliation to hold and to enjoy) peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ (the Messiah, the Anointed One).

No one can have the true peace of God in their life until they are reconciled to God through the Lord Jesus Christ. Reconciliation produces the restoration of a relationship of peace that had been disturbed and broken in the Garden of Eden by the high treason of Adam. Reconciliation is to change a relationship of hostility, enmity, and separation to a relationship of love, acceptance, admiration, and friendship. It is a relationship of peace and favor, as we are no longer at war with God or hostile to Him. There is no rejection, no condemnation, no guilt, and no unworthiness in this close, loving relationship. This relationship of peace is more than the mere absence of enmity or hostility, but the invitation from God to come into his presence and enjoy the closeness and loving bond of a relationship with Him.

The peace of God is the legal right and possession of every born again believer. We HAVE peace with God. All the barriers have been abolished between you and God. There is no friction, no uneasiness, no conflict, and no obstruction in this new relationship of peace. It is a complete harmony and unity with Yahweh-Shalom. The word “peace” in the Greek means: to bind or join together what is broken or divided, setting the broken parts as one again. When the broken parts come together, there is nothing between them that would stop the cohesion that has taken place. Once they are joined together they are one, never to be separated again. It holds better than super glue, because they will never come apart. True peace is complete oneness and unity with God where there is a mutual enjoyment of the wonderful relationship of a Father with His children.

The Greek word also carries with it the meaning of the absence or end of strife and denotes a state of untroubled, undisturbed well-being. The word “with” in the Greek means: toward and is an indication of closeness or nearness and could be translated ‘facing’. We stand in God’s presence justified and freed from the penalty of sin, completely made righteous and redeemed with unlimited access to our Heavenly Father, because of the finished work of Jesus Christ. We have made lovely and acceptable in Christ Jesus and gaze face to face into the loving presence of our God, having complete peace and oneness with Him.

We are in Him, and He is in us, and in this oneness we have His peace as a permanent possession, because of who we are in Christ. His peace is a part of us, just as much as an arm or leg is part of our physical body. We don’t have to ask God for peace because we already have it. He has given to us all the peace of God to hold and enjoy every moment of our lives. We renew our minds by faith and confess this great sonship right of peace to bring it into manifestation in our lives. We do not want the peace of God to remain dormant in us, but we want to activate it by believing, so it is a living reality in every circumstance of life

What a wonderful truth and message about the peace of God, as it is so magnificent that God calls it the “gospel of peace” in Romans 10:15. The good news of peace that Jesus Christ brings should be declared from every mountain top to every valley, to every city, and to every town. We should just stand in awe of how breathtaking the goodness of God is as He has given us His peace that can never be disturbed, agitated, or broken.

Jesus Christ is the way, truth, and the life to the peace of God. It cannot be found or discovered anywhere else. It does not originate in the mind of man or in some philosophy, religion, or way of thinking. Jesus Christ is the Prince of Peace, according to Isaiah 9:6, and the word “prince” in the Hebrew means: ruler, prince, chief, captain and leader. Jesus Christ is the captain, the chieftain, the ruler, and prince of the peace of God. If you want the peace of God to rule and reign in your life, you must come to its only Prince, the Lord Jesus Christ. The peace of God is only available in, through, and by Him.

Luke 1:78,79 (New Living Translation):

Because of God’s tender mercy, the morning light from heaven (Jesus Christ) is about to break upon us. To give light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, and to guide us to the path of peace.

Ephesians 2:14(a) (Wuest):

For He (Jesus Christ) himself is our peace…

When you examine this verse in Ephesians in the Greek, the emphasis is on the intensive pronoun autos which means, “He and no other.” In his Word Studies of the Greek New Testament, Wuest states that there is even a deeper meaning from the Greek and that this verse suggests:

Not only “He alone” but “He in His own Person” made peace. It was not only that peace was made by Christ and ranks as His achievement, but that it is so identified with Him that were He away, it would also fail-so dependent on Him that apart from Him we cannot have it.

Without Jesus Christ, there is no peace of God available to any man, woman or child upon the earth. Jesus Christ is the light of the world that delivers us from the power of darkness and guides us to the path of peace. The peace of Yahweh-Shalom is absolutely dependent upon what Jesus Christ did at Calvary, for it required His sacrifice on the cross and God raising Him from the dead to restore the peace of God lost by Adam in the Garden of Eden. We cannot enjoy and experience this peace unless we are a new creation in Christ; otherwise peace is a fleeting illusion. The blood of Jesus Christ was shed for our peace.

Colossians 1:20 (NIV):

And through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross.

Isaiah 53:5 (English Standard Version):

But he was wounded for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his stripes we are healed.

The punishment that Jesus endured on the cross was for our peace. He paid the penalty of our sin, and as our Savior, brought us into harmony and oneness with God, where we can rest in and enjoy the wholeness of His peace. Our peace was bought and paid for by the blood of Christ and sealed with an eternal covenant that guarantees peace as part of our eternal inheritance. You are identified and share in everything He accomplished at Calvary, for Christ is in you and you are in Christ. He is a part of you and lives and abides with you always. We can experience as a living reality the same peace Jesus had when he walked on the earth.

John 14:27 (Amplified):

Peace I leave with you; My [own] peace I now give and bequeath to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid. [Stop allowing yourselves to be
agitated and disturbed; and do not permit yourselves to be fearful and intimidated and cowardly and unsettled.]

John 16:33 (Amplified):

I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have [perfect] peace and confidence. In the world you have tribulation and trials and distress and frustration; but be of good cheer [take courage; be confident, certain, undaunted]! For I have overcome the world. [I have deprived it of power to harm you and have conquered it for you.]

Jesus Christ gave us His perfect peace, and this is the same peace Jesus had in quality, richness, and measure. It is the peace Jesus had in the midst of a raging storm on the Sea of Galilee, in the midst of the angry crowd at the synagogue in Nazareth, in His quiet prayer times on the mountainside, and in the middle of the hurling accusations of the Pharisees and Sadducees. The heart of Jesus was absolute perfect calmness, even in the midst of the most raging circumstance or challenge. It was a place where no trouble or agitation could penetrate or disturb, and where the stillness and quietness of God reigned unbroken. It was a peace that came from the bond of unity He has with His Heavenly Father, and the harmony and intimacy of that relationship.

The word “give” in verse 27 in the Greek means: to give freely and unforced; to deliver, supply, and commit. Jesus freely and without hesitation supplied, committed, and delivered to us in love His wonderful, awesome peace. It is not a counterfeit outward peace that the world offers, which is unstable, fleeting, and temporary. It was His peace that He lived, breathed, and walked in every moment of His earthly ministry.

The world “troubled” in verse 27 in the Greek means: to stir up, to agitate as water in a pool, to disturb with various emotions, to disquiet and make restless, to cause inward commotion and to take away one’s calmness of mind. The word “be afraid” in the Greek means: to be timid, to be cowardly, and to shrink back in fear.” Both of these verbs are in the passive voice in the Greek, which means the heart is being acted upon by an outside force or power and is the receiver of the verbal action. We are to stop allowing outside influences to disturb, agitate, and trouble our heart, for we have the same peace of God that reigned in the life of Jesus. Jesus Christ never became agitated, restless, or disturbed inwardly, no matter what was happening around him. Even as he hung on the cross for hours in pain and agony, his heart was at complete peace. He did not allow circumstances, people, or relationships to steal His peace.

There will be tribulations, trials, and frustrations thrown at you while you live in the world, but it never need disturb or agitate your inner calmness and peace. In Christ we have perfect peace and confidence, for our Savior overcame every circumstance and power in the world and deprived it of its power to harm us. His complete victory at Calvary gave us his peace so that we can be more than conquerors both inwardly and outwardly in every situation. We never have to shrink back in fear from any person, influence, problem, or circumstance, for we are His and He is ours and we have the peace of God living in our hearts. It is like a ship’s chronometer, which remains perfectly motionless in the midst of the most tumultuous rocking and raging of the sea, and maintains its perfect level when the ship is plunging and careening in every direction. The peace of God in our heart is our chronometer that allows us to be perfectly calm and tranquil, even in the midst of a tempest sea of circumstance and the raging waves of the negativity and fears of this age.

Philippians 4:6,7: (Wuest):

Stop perpetually worrying about even one thing, but in everything by prayer whose essence is that of worship and devotion and by supplication which is a cry for your personal needs, with thanksgiving let your requests for the things asked for be made known in the presence of God. And the peace of God which surpasses all power of comprehension shall mount guard over your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.

Phillips Translation:

Don’t worry over anything whatever; tell God every detail of your needs in earnest and thankful prayer. And the peace of God which transcends human understanding, will keep constant guard over your hearts and minds as they rest in Christ Jesus.

We need never worry or be anxious about any circumstance or problem we face, for we have a Heavenly Father to whom we can take every need and difficulty to in prayer. In the Greek, the word “worry” describes the state of the mind of being pulled apart and divided by anxious cares and worries. It is characterized by an extreme uneasiness of the mind and a brooding fear about something, and emphasizes a fear of misfortune, failure, disappointment, and disaster. Worry denotes a lack of focus and trust in God and an endless running of the mind in all directions. God says instead of worrying or being anxious, bring the problem to Him in earnest and thankful prayer. We should worry about nothing and pray about everything. That is the lifestyle of the believer.

The word “prayer” in the Greek means: a prayer to God of worship, adoration, and devotion remembering His character, His attributes, His names, His goodness, and who He is. It is a prayer where our heart is focused on His greatness and majesty. It is a prayer where our heart remembers all the great qualities of the goodness of God and overflows with thankfulness. It is from this heart of love that we make specific detailed requests for our personal needs and the needs of others. Then God promises that His awesome, wonderful peace will mount and keep constant guard over our hearts and minds as we rest in our union in Christ Jesus. No fear, no worry, and no anxiety can penetrate and disturb our heart or mind, for the peace of God is guarding our heart.

The word “guard” in the Greek was a military term for the guarding of a city by a military garrison that kept constant watch to protect and secure the city from the hostile invasion of any enemy. This peace of God protects and guards our heart like a military garrison, keeping it calm, tranquil, and without agitation from any outside influence. When we love God with all our heart, seek Him in prayer in all of life’s situations, and walk in our sonship rights and privileges in Christ Jesus, the peace of God will overflow in our heart and act as a strong barrier against every fiery dart of the wicked one. The peace of God is the impenetrable barrier, the unbreakable wall, and the protective watchtower against every device of the devil designed to distract and divide our mind from serving the one true God. The peace of God enables us to live above the fear and anxiety of the world and enjoy our reconciliation with our Heavenly Father, even when the terror of this age rages around us.

Romans 16:20 (English Standard Version):

And the God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you. .

Wuest:

And the God of the peace will trample Satan under your feet soon.

Yahweh-Shalom is the God of THE PEACE, and He will crush and trample Satan and all his influences under our feet, because His peace lives and reigns in our heart. The word “crush” in the Greek means: to break in pieces, to shiver, to tread down, to be perplexed and in anguish, to tear one’s body and shatter one’s strength, and to trample on as a conqueror.” When we are in harmony and fellowship with the God of peace and allowing Him to direct our lives in the center of peace, every satanic power, every satanic bondage, every satanic anxiety and every satanic fear, is utterly broken in pieces and shattered by the God of peace. There is nothing that perplexes and causes anguish to the devil more than seeing a born again believer walk and live in the peace of God. Satan cannot rattle, disturb, agitate and control a child of God, who enjoys and claims their sonship right of peace. The peace of God allows us to live with Satan utterly trampled and tread down under our feet. If you want to crush the negative influence of Satan, then you must live, move, and breathe in the peace of God.

Colossians 3:15 (Wuest):

And the peace of Christ, let it be acting as umpire in your hearts, into which also you were called into one body. And be constantly thankful persons.

The peace of Christ should be the foundation of every decision we make in life. This peace should be the umpire in our heart determining the direction in which we choose to walk. I love the game of baseball, and umpires are an important part of the game. The umpire determines whether a pitch is a ball or strike, whether a player is safe or out, and whether a ball is fair or foul. They enforce the rules and make the calls, unruffled by managers or players. The umpire settles differences when there is a conflict in thought and opinion. The outcome of the game is often determined by the call of the umpire.

When we are in harmony and fellowship with God and walking by the spirit, the wonderful peace of Christ will settle every difficulty, resolve every conflict, and enlighten every decision. The peace of Christ will show us what the will of God is in every choice we have in life. The peace of God not only guards our heart, but it guides our heart into the paths that God has chosen for us. The peace of God allows us to move into every situation with total poise and calmness, not upset or perturbed, because we know the God of peace. Every born again believer in the body of Christ has been called to peace, and the peace of Yahweh-Shalom should be a vibrant, living reality in our lives.

II Thessalonians 3:16 (NIV):

Now may the Lord of peace himself give you peace at all times and in every way. The Lord be with all of you.

Amplified:

Now may the Lord of peace Himself grant you His peace (the peace of His kingdom) at all times and in all ways [under all circumstances and conditions, whatever comes]. The Lord [be] with you all.

What a wonderful relationship of peace and wholeness we can enjoy with our Lord, where nothing is broken or lacking. We have the great benefit and blessing of peace, where we are in complete unity with Him and have an inner tranquility and calmness that is unaffected by circumstance. At all times and in all ways, no matter the problem, condition, or circumstance, the Lord has given us His peace to guard and guide our hearts. No trouble, no fear, and no worry can disturb the heart of peace. What an awesome characteristic of the goodness of God-His peace which He has given to every person who has been reconciled to Him through Christ. The Lord of peace lives in our heart, and nothing is more refreshing, more exciting, and more exhilarating than to experience His peace every moment of our lives.

Posted by: goodnessofgod2010

Excerpt from “The Magnificent Goodness of God and How it Will Transform Your Life” by Tim Rowe